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Reynol Junco is an Associate Professor in the Department of
Academic Development and Counseling and Director of Disability Services at Lock
Haven University of Pennsylvania. Dr. Junco is a graduate of the University of
Florida with a B.S. in Psychology. He earned his Doctor of Education from the
Pennsylvania State University in Counselor Education. Dr. Junco’s research
interests include examining student development through the use of technology,
online survey design, psychometric assessment, and using technology to enhance
student success. Dr. Junco has presented extensively on the topic of Net
Generation student culture, slang, technology use, and music preferences.
Dr. Junco’s publications have focused on college student technology use. Dr.
Junco has recently written the “Wired Window” series for an upcoming revision
of the Gardner, Jewler, and Barefoot textbook, Your College Experience:
Strategies for success. He has also recently published a book entitled
Connecting to the Net Generation: What higher education professionals need
to know about today’s students. Dr. Junco has also published a
chapter entitled “Technology and Today’s First Year Students” in the book,
Challenging and Supporting the First Year Student: A Handbook for Improving
the First Year of College by Upcraft, Gardner, Barefoot, and
Associates.
Tracy Mitrano is the director of IT Policy and Computer
Policy and Law Programs for the Office of Information Technologies at Cornell.
Elected to the EDUCAUSE Board in 2006, she will take her seat as its Treasurer
in January 2007. Mitrano is a 2002 graduate of the Frye Institute, and since
then a member of its faculty, chair of Internet 2 InCommon Steering Committee
and from 2004-2006 the co-chair of the Internet 2/EDUCAUSE Security Task Force,
Law and Policy Team.
A member of the 2005 EDUCAUSE Program Committee, Mitrano is also faculty of
the EDUCAUSE Leadership Institute and co-facilitator of the Seminars on
Academic Computing. In 2003 the University of Iowa named her the Ada Stoflet
Lecturer. In spring 2005, Mitrano taught an Internet Law class for the MiNE
Program at the Universite Cattolica in Piacenza, Italy. At Cornell, Mitrano is
an adjunct assistant professor in the Information Science Program where she
teaches Information Science 515, "Culture, Law and Politics of the
Internet."
Thomas Quinn is Vice President and Global Head Application
Risk Assurance at Goldman Sachs. Tom has over 13 years experience in the
areas of Technology, Systems Management, and Information Security in both the
Defense sector and the Financial Services industry. He has been with Goldman
Sachs since 1999 holding positions in systems engineering and application and
infrastructure security. In his current role he provides risk consulting
services and guidance to Goldman Sachs' Application Development teams and the
lines of business they support.
He actively works with the firm's Investment Research, Private Equity,
Investment Banking, Prime Brokerage and Private Wealth Management teams as part
of the Leveraging Technology Expertise (LTE) program. Most recently Tom's
focus has been on improving the use of metrics to drive broad adoption of
technology controls as well as the challenges associated with the use of
Enterprise Rights Management (ERM) in Financial services.
Robert J. Du Charme is a Security Training Manager in the
Critical Infrastructure Assurance Group at Cisco Systems. His responsibilities
are to create and deliver relevant, current, and high quality security
education and training for higher education and Critical Infrastructure Program
sector audiences utilizing available or new training materials and lab
resources. He also provides technical and course development support as
required. Mr. Du Charme joined Cisco in 1998, previously serving as Manager,
Learning and Development for the VPN and Security Business Unit and as a
technical trainer concentrating on network security technologies. Prior to
Cisco, he served in a variety of network and help desk positions for the
Administrative Office of the U.S. Federal Courts. He also held many network and
system administrative jobs while serving 17 years in the U.S. Air Force.
Matthew Brill is a partner in the Washington, D.C. office
of Latham & Perkins and a member of the Communications Practice. Mr.
Brill advises communications companies on a broad range of regulatory,
transactional, and litigation matters, including issues involving emerging
technologies as well as traditional telecommunications and media issues. He has
represented a leading provider of cable telephony services, wireline and
wireless carriers, Internet service providers, satellite carriers, and
broadcast networks, among others, in proceedings before the Federal
Communications Commission (FCC) and federal courts. Mr. Brill is also
EDUCAUSE’s legal counsel on CALEA (Communications Assistance for Law
Enforcement Act) issues.
Annie Antón is an Associate Professor of Software
Engineering in the Computer Science Department of the College of Engineering at
NC State University (NCSU), where she is a Senior Research Ethics Fellow for
the period of 2006-08 and a member of the NCSU Cyber Defense Lab. Her research
focuses on methods and tools to support the specification of complete, correct
behavior of software systems used in environments that pose risks of loss as a
consequence of failures and misuse. This includes Web-based and e-commerce
systems in which the security of personal and private information is
particularly vulnerable. To this end, she has developed a leadership role in
research, education and outreach with her three current initiatives.
Antón is the founder and director of ThePrivacyPlace.org, a research group
of students and faculty at NCSU, Georgia Tech, Purdue University (see our
Collaborative NSF CyberTrust Project), and University of Lugano. She is leading
this group in the development of technology to assist practitioners and policy
makers in meeting the challenge of eliciting and expressing policies (a form of
requirements). These tools help ensure that privacy policies are aligned with
the software systems that they govern.
M. E. Kabay began programming computers in assembly
language in 1965. In 1976, he received his PhD from Dartmouth College in
applied statistics and invertebrate zoology and taught biology, statistics, and
programming as a university professor in Canada and overseas. In 1979, he
joined a compiler team for a new 4GL and RDBMS in the U.S., then joined
Hewlett-Packard Canada in 1980 as an operating systems and database performance
specialist, winning the Systems Engineer of the Year Award in 1982. He ran his
own consulting firm, JINBU Corporation, from 1986 to 1998, specializing in
operations management, facilities security, and corporate security policy
development and implementation. He served as Director of Education for the
National Computer Security Association (NCSA, later ICSA, then TruSecure) from
1990 to 1999, then worked with AtomicTangerine where he supported the
International Institute for Information Integrity (I-4). He earned his CISSP
designation in 1997.
Since 1986, he has published over 950 articles in operations management and
security, written a college textbook on enterprise security (McGraw-Hill,
1996), and served as Technical Editor of the 4th Edition of the Computer
Security Handbook (Wiley, 2002). He writes two security-management columns
a week distributed by Network World, and is working on the 5th Edition
of the Computer Security Handbook for release in Winter 2008. He has
been a speaker at the United States War College, the Pentagon, NATO HQ, and at
NATO Counterintelligence training in Germany. He was inducted into the ISSA
Hall of Fame in December 2004 and earned his ISSMP designation from
(ISC)2 in November 2005. Dr Kabay is the Program Director of the
Master's Program in Information Assurance and is the CTO of the School of
Graduate Studies at Norwich University, Northfield, VT 05663-1035 USA.
Dr. Peter Stephenson has over 40 years experience in
information systems and security and is an internationally-known theoretical
forensic computer scientist and teacher. A writer, consultant, and lecturer in
information protection, cyber investigation, and information operations, he has
lectured extensively on network planning, implementation, technology, and
security over the past 25 years. He has written or co-authored 14 books
(including many in foreign-language translations) and several hundred articles
in major national and international trade publications, including his
well-known monthly column for the Secure Computing (SC) Magazine.
He holds a patent for the Forensic Analysis of Risks in Enterprise Systems.
He began his information security career as a U. S. Navy cryptographer in
1964 and has worked with computer and network communications since the early
1970s. He was the director of technology for the global security practice of
Netigy Corporation and was, until July 2003, the worldwide director of
technology and research coordinator for QinetiQ Trusted Information Management,
Inc., a large international information security professional and managed
services company. Prior to joining Netigy, he operated his own information
security consulting practice for over 17 years. He holds a BS in electrical
engineering, as well as the professional designations Certified Information
Security Manager (CISM) and Fellow of the Institute for Communications,
Arbitration, and Forensics (FICAF). He is a Certified Information Systems
Security Professional (CISSP). He completed his PhD in 2004 at Oxford-Brookes
University in Oxford, UK, where his doctoral thesis was entitled Structured
Investigation of Digital Incidents in Complex Computing Environments. In
June 2007, he received his Master of Arts in Diplomacy from Norwich University.
Dr Stephenson is the Chief Information Security Officer of Norwich University
and is a Visiting Professor in the School of Business and Management. He is
Associate Program Director of the Master's Program in Information Assurance in
the School of Graduate Studies at Norwich.
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