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Proceedings of 2007 Cyber Security and Information Infrastructure Workshop

Proceedings of 2007 Cyber Security and Information Infrastructure WorkshopProceedings of 2007 Cyber Security and Information Infrastructure Workshop (e-book)

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Workshop goal was to challenge, establish and debate a far-reaching discussion that broadly and comprehensively outlines a strategy for cyber security that is founded on sound technologies for better understanding of existing and emerging threats; advances in insider threat detection, deterrence, mitigation and threat elimination; ensuring security, survivability and dependability of critical infrastructures; guaranteeing availability of time-critical scalably secure systems; observable measurable certifiable security effects, rather than hypothesized causes; quantitative metrics that enable us to specify security requirements, formulate security claims, and certify security properties; solutions that provide a measure of assurance against known and unknown (though perhaps pre-modeled) threats; mission fulfillment, whether or not security violations have taken place rather than mitigating all violations indiscriminately.

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Proceedings Second Annual Cyber Security and Information Infrastructure Research Workshop

Proceedings Second Annual Cyber Security and Information Infrastructure Research WorkshopProceedings Second Annual Cyber Security and Information Infrastructure Research Workshop (e-book)

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Cyber Security: Beyond the Maginot Line. Recently the FBI reported that computer crime has skyrocketed costing over $67B in 2005 and affecting 2.8M+ businesses and organizations. Attack sophistication is unprecedented along with availability of open source concomitant tools. Private, academic, and public sectors invest significant resources in cyber security. Industry primarily performs cyber security research as an investment in future products and services. While the public sector also funds cyber security R&D, the majority of this activity focuses on the specific agency mission. Broad areas of cyber security remain neglected or underdeveloped. Consequently, this workshop endeavors to explore issues involving cyber security and related technologies toward strengthening such areas and enabling the development of new tools and methods for securing our information infrastructure critical assets. We aim to assemble new ideas and proposals about robust models on which we can architect a secure cyberspace.

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