Colin Russell appointed as CPI's Managing Director
Congratulations to Colin Russell, who is now the Managing Director of CPI! He was appointed in October of this year.
Congratulations to Colin Russell, who is now the Managing Director of CPI! He was appointed in October of this year.
CANARIE Summit 2021 is happening from November 16-18! This year theme is "Stronger Together: Rethinking Cybersecurity"
This year's summit focuses on what it takes to secure Canada’s research and education sector, while making Canada a leader in cybersecurity expertise, infrastructure, and innovation.
Each day focuses on:
The Centre for Information Integrity and Information Systems Assurance at the University of Waterloo (UW CISA) is pleased to announce its 12th biennial symposium to be held virtually from October 14-16th. Our symposia are recognized for the extensive interaction between practitioners and academics.
Sessions include:
Professor N. Asokan has been named Executive Director of the Cybersecurity and Privacy Institute for a term that began on May 1, 2021.
The University of Waterloo, in partnership with several stakeholders, has launched a new platform in Singapore to help address a cybersecurity workforce skills gap in the region.
Technological innovation or a challenge to privacy and civil liberties
By Angelica Sanchez
University Relations
In an effort to track the spread of COVID-19, more and more contact tracing apps will continue to emerge. However, there are major concerns surrounding privacy issues when it comes to technology such as these apps collecting personal data.
Statement on privacy-respecting and trust-worthy COVID-19 tracing apps (version française ci-dessous - for the French version see below)
Director of the Cybersecurity and Privacy Institute, Florian Kerschbaum, received a 2019 Outstanding Young Computer Science Researcher Award from CS-Can/Info-Can, the nation’s professional society dedicated to representing all aspects of computer science and the interests of the discipline to Can
Media, government, and industry commonly frame security and privacy as diametrically opposed: protecting one requires sacrificing the other.
Privacy, Infrastructures, Policy brought together researchers with international speakers from journalism, national security, academia and the corporate world to challenge these misconceptions. A central thread of each of the talks is the design, implementation, and benefits of privacy-enhancing social and technological infrastructures.