Francesca Bosco – UNICRI, Presented at the 2016 Spring SERENE-RISC Workshop. Advances in the field of global technology have transformed the way in which societies function, affecting governments, businesses, and individuals alike, evoking a wide array of societal benefits, while also subjecting populations to varying degrees of cyber risk. Critical infrastructure serves as …
Presented at the SERENE-RISC Spring workshop 2016. As anybody who uses a PC has discovered, the “free” software industry is a mess. Customers have become very suspicious of every offer, and use a jaundiced eye to double-check each checkbox and click. Still they make mistakes and end up with unwanted software. This industry now makes …
From the SERENE-RISC Workshop held in April 2016 in Vancouver, Canada. Social Media Analytics for Intelligence and Security Informatics Christopher Yang – Drexel University In this talk, we’ll discuss some of the social media and data analytics work we have done on the DIBBs data archive. The DIBBS data archive is a 3-year project funded …
While threats that manifest in cyberspace are a national security imperative, they often manifest at a very local level. Digital connectivity is driving shifts in the policing landscape and new operating models are needed to confront the challenges of crimes enabled by the Internet. As a former Deputy Chief of Police with the Toronto …
Euvgeny Naumov Delve Labs presented at the SERENE-RISC Workshop in 2017 The rapid rise in the number and ubiquity of internet services and internet-facing devices has increased pressure to automate cybersecurity monitoring. However, vulnerabilities discovered by automated solutions per scan can number in the thousands and beyond, still placing a considerable burden on security teams …
In this video, Prof. Jeremy Clark defines what bitcoin is, how it is used and its relation to cybercrime. This talk was presented in Toronto on May 31, 2016, at the SERENE-RISC Tutorial “Examining Cybercrime 2: Financial Edition”. Jeremy takes something mystical and clearly explains it. There’s this data structure which you may have heard …