Team for Research in
Ubiquitous Secure Technology

2011 Women's Institute for Summer Enrichment

PROGRAM OVERVIEW

WISE is a one-week residential summer program at a TRUST campus that brings together graduate students, post-doctoral fellows, and professors from all disciplines that are interested in Ubiquitous Secure Technology and the social, political, and economical ramifications that are associated with this technology. Thought leaders from academia, industry, and government come to WISE to teach power courses in several disciplines, including computer science, engineering, economics, law, and public policy. The one-week program includes rigorous classes and allows participants opportunities for career development and to network with their peers.

The 2011 WISE Institute was held July 15-19, 2011 on the Carnege Mellon University campus in Pittsburgh, PA. A copy of the agenda can be found here.

SPEAKERS 2011


 Lorrie Cranor
 CyLab, Carnegie Mellon University


Lorrie Faith Cranor is an Associate Professor of Computer Science and of Engineering and Public Policy at Carnegie Mellon University where she is director of the CyLab Usable Privacy and Security Laboratory (CUPS). She teaches courses on privacy, usable security, and computers and society. She is also a co-founder of Wombat Security Technologies, Inc. She came to CMU in December 2003 after seven years at AT&T Labs-Research. While at AT&T she also taught in the Stern School of Business at New York University. Dr. Cranor has played a key role in building the usable privacy and security research community. She co-edited the seminal book Security and Usability (O'Reilly 2005), and founded the Symposium On Usable Privacy and Security (SOUPS). She also directs an NSF-funded Integrative Graduate Education and Research Traineeship (IGERT) program on usable privacy and security.


 Brenda Fellows
 Fellows Corporate Consortium


Brenda Fellows is an Adjunct Faculty Member in the Haas School of Business at the University of California, Berkeley where she teaches Managing Human Resources and Leadership. Dr. Fellows is an Industrial/Organizational Psychologist, President and CEO of Fellows Corporate Consortium, LLC, a global management consulting firm specializing in multinational corporate consultation. She is also an Adjunct Professor and Thesis Advisor in the MBA and MIB Programs in the Grenoble Graduate School of Business and Management in Grenoble, France and the London School of Business and Finance in London, England. She has been an Adjunct Faculty Member in Bay Area graduate and undergraduate business schools: Santa Clara University, Notre Dame de Namur University, San Jose State University and San Francisco State University. Dr. Fellows' award winning research centers on creating effective containers for all persons to work and grow together. She has found that building capacity in people and systems allows organizations and their leaders to add enormous value to outcomes critical to their success.


 Deborah Frincke
 US Department of Defense


Deborah Frincke joined the Department of Defense as a Deputy Director for Research in 2011. She became an Affiliate Professor with the University of Washington's iSchool (information school) in December 2008. Deborah worked from 2004-2011 at Pacific Northwest National Laboratory as Chief Scientist for CyberSecurity. Prior to joining PNNL, Dr. Frincke was a (Full) Professor at the University of Idaho, and co-founder/co-director of the U Idaho Center for Secure and Dependable Systems, one of the first such institutions to receive NSA's designation of a national Center of Excellence in Information Assurance Education. She is an enthusiastic charter member of the Department of Energys cyber security grass roots community. She co-founded TriGeo Network Systems, which was recently positioned by Garner in the Leaders Quadrant for security information and event management. She has written over eighty published articles and technical reports.
Leadership Challenges in Research--Academia, National Laboratory, Federal



 Kristen Gates
 University of California, Berkeley


Dr. Kristen Gates is the Executive Director of Education for The Team for Research in Ubiquitous Secure Technology (TRUST) at the University of California, Berkeley. Prior to joining TRUST, Dr. Gates was Senior Adjunct Faculty and Faculty Coordinator for Technology Development in the Department of Design and Industry at San Francisco State University. She is responsible for the continued development and implementation of TRUST's education and diversity programs such as the Research Experience for Undergraduates (TRUST-REU), Women's Institute in Summer Enrichment (WISE) for women researchers, Curriculum Development in Security and Information Assurance (CDSIA) for faculty and the Colloquium and Research in Information Technology (SECuR-IT) for graduate students studying cybersecurity. Dr. Gates joined TRUST in 2006.
TRUST Education Overview


 Dorothy Glancy
 Santa Clara University School of Law


Dorothy J. Glancy is Professor of Law at Santa Clara University School of Law. A graduate of Wellesley College (B.A.) and Harvard Law School (J.D.), she was also a postgraduate Fellow in Law and the Humanities at Harvard University. Professor Glancy concentrates on legal issues related to privacy, intellectual property, land use and technology. She is admitted to the bars of both California and the District of Columbia and practiced law in Washington, D.C. She served as counsel to the United States Senate Judiciary Subcommittee on Constitutional Rights (assisting Senator Ervin in the Watergate investigations) and in the Office of General Counsel of the United States Department of Agriculture. Professor Glancy is a Research Fellow of the Gruter Institute for Law and Behavioral Research and works with Santa Clara University's Center for Science, Technology and Society on issues related to technology and law. She is a member of the legal committee of the California Privacy and Security Advisory Board that advises the California Office of Health Information Integrity. She chairs the e-Practices Subcommittee of the Court Technology Advisory Committee of the Judicial Council of California.
Privacy in the Smart Grid


 Leslie Lambert
 Juniper Networks


Leslie is Vice President of Information Technology at Juniper Networks where she reports to the CIO as the Chief Information Security Officer. Leslie is responsible for overall IT Security Management, including intrusion detection, threat vulnerability assessments, incident management, security awareness, prevention and protection against SPAM and malware attacks, policies/standards/procedures development and deployment. Leslie has 30 years of experience in both Information Technology and technical/business infrastructure. Her experiences range from Control Systems Design to the delivery, implementation, and management of IT systems and infrastructure. Prior to Sun, Leslie was with Intergraph Corp. and Fluor Daniel in key Customer Engineering, IT, and Control Systems Design roles. Her experience covers the industries of oil and gas, engineering and construction, evaluation research, customer training, CAD/CAE, and Information Technology, where she gained significant hands-on operational, architectural, and management experience.
The Shifting Threat Landscape and Mobile Device Security
Securing the Next Generation Data Center


 Brad Malin
 School of Medicine, Vanderbilt University


Bradley Malin is an Assistant Professor of Biomedical Informatics in the School of Medicine and an Assistant Research Professor of Computer Science in the School of Engineering at Vanderbilt University. He is the founder and current director of the Health Information Privacy Laboratory (HIPLab), an interdisciplinary endeavor that was established to address the growing need for data privacy research and development for the rapidly expanding health information technology sector. The HIPLab is funded through various grants from the National Science Foundation and National Institutes of Health to construct technologies that enable privacy in the context of real world organizational, political, and health information architectures. In addition to its role as a scientific research program, since 2007 the HIPLab has functioned as a data privacy consultation service for the Electronic Medical Records and Genomics (eMERGE) network, a consortium sponsored by the National Human Genome Research Institute and National Institute of General Medical Sciences.


 Priya Narasimhan
 CyLab, Carnegie Mellon University


Prof. Priya Narasimhan is an Associate Professor with the Electrical & Computer Engineering Department, and Director of the CyLab Mobility Research Center, at Carnegie Mellon University. Her research interests lie in the fields of dependable distributed systems, embedded systems and mobile systems. Her research has earned her a Alfred Sloan Fellowship, the 2009 Carnegie Science Center's Emerging Female Scientist Award, an NSF CAREER Award, a Best Paper Award, the 2001 UCSB Lancaster Outstanding Doctoral Dissertation Award and two IBM Faculty Partnership Awards. Her teaching earned her the 2008 Eta Kappa Nu (Carnegie Mellon Sigma Chapter) Excellence in Teaching Award. She is the President and Founder of YinzCam, Inc., a company focused on mobile live streaming and experiential technologies for live events.


 Michelle Nix
 McKesson, Inc


Michelle Nix is Director of IT Risk Management at the Fortune 15 Company, McKesson. Michelle's role at McKesson is to manage the IT Risk Management program for the $100 billion US Pharmaceuticals division. Michelle interacts with senior management and other internal and external risk assessing organizations to provide program level reporting, governance, guidance, education and awareness. Michelle's background is in health care where she has more than 22 years experience. She has held a number of positions in this industry including pharmaceutical research and development, administration, quality improvement, project management, operations, IT systems support and IT Risk Management. Michelle also has government standards setting experience. Specifically, in California, Michelle is the Co-chair of the California Privacy and Security Advisory Board (CalPSAB) Privacy Committee which focuses on providing state-level privacy standards for health information exchange.
McKesson--U.S. Pharmaceuticals IT Risk Management Program


 Joan Peckham
 University of Rhode Island


Joan Peckham is a professor of computer science at the University of Rhode Island (URI). Her area of scholarship is conceptual data modeling which she has applied to several interdisciplinary domains including bioinformatics, building evacuation, and transportation. Joan has also served as co-PI on an NSF ADVANCE institutional transformation p roject at URI and she is interested in promoting the careers of underrepresented and underserved groups. She has recently served as a program director at NSF in the CISE (Computer and Information Science and Engineering) directorate and in OCI (Office of Cyberinfrastructure) with a focus on education and workforce programs. On August 1, 2011 she will become the chair of the Department of Computer Science and Statistics at URI.


 Adrian Perrig
 Carnegie Mellon University


Adrian Perrig is a Professor in Electrical and Computer Engineering, Engineering and Public Policy, and Computer Science at Carnegie Mellon University. Adrian serves as the technical director for Carnegie Mellon's Cybersecurity Laboratory (CyLab). He earned his Ph.D. degree in Computer Science from Carnegie Mellon University, and spent three years during his Ph.D. degree at the University of California at Berkeley. He received his B.Sc. degree in Computer Engineering from the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Lausanne (EPFL). Adrian's research revolves around building secure systems and includes network security, trustworthy computing and security for social networks. More specifically, he is interested in trust establishment, trustworthy code execution in the presence of malware, and how to design secure next-generation networks. More information about his research is available on http://www.ece.cmu.edu/~adrian/ web page. He is a recipient of the NSF CAREER award in 2004, IBM faculty fellowships in 2004 and 2005, the Sloan research fellowship in 2006, the Security 7 award in the category of education by the Information Security Magazine in 2009, and the Benjamin Richard Teare teaching award in 2011.
Scalability, Control and Isolation On Next-Generation Networks


 Theodora Titonis
 TTI Technologies, Inc.


Theodora Titonis is an innovative visionary in technology and cyber security. Ms. Titonis started programming computers at the age of seven, creating her first software inventions on the TRS-80 using the BASIC programming language. During the dot-com era, she developed software and provided cyber security expertise to Citigroup, Data Broadcasting, and Gateway Computers. In 2001, Ms. Titonis founded TTi Technologies, Inc. and in 2002 she was called upon as one of the first cyber security experts for the newly established U.S. Department of Homeland Security. In 2009, TTi co-founded the West Virginia Smart Sensor Supercomputing Center to support a research program for the Department of Defense. Ms. Titonis combines expert knowledge with leading edge technologies to provide comprehensive cyber security solutions to TTi's customers.
Scalability, Control and Isolation On Next-Generation Network Mobile Security and the Need for Innovative Solutions
Encouraging Women Entrepreneurs: From Research to Product