For many years, we have run summer programs in cybersecurity for young students. Unfortunately, we will not be able to do this in Summer 2024.
Stay tuned for Summer 2025!
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Vibrent Health Reimagines Health Research and Professor David Kotz to Lead Dartmouth's Collaborative Effort
Professor David Kotz to lead Dartmouth’s collaborative effort with Vibrent Health under the National Institutes of Health’s All of Us Research Program. The mission of this project is to collect longitudinal datasets that generate opportunities for scientific discoveries, with the understanding that participant privacy and security must be upheld throughout the process. Kotz and his team will be developing novel approaches to ensure participant privacy in mobile, wearable, and pervasive technologies, throughout the collection of health-related data. Furthermore, the team will work on creating interfaces to obtain privacy-related preferences from participants and relay privacy-related information back to the user. Professor Kotz’s previous security and privacy research spans the healthcare and smart device spaces. The team look forward to this new collaboration and the technologies that will emerge in hopes to ensure the continuation of robust health research while upholding the privacy and security of the individual. The official press release can be foundhere: https://bit.ly/3uVRQfO
To learn more about Professor Kotz’s recent research endeavors and collaborations in the mHealth space, check out CBTH, THaW and Auracle, and for his current smart device multi-university project, SPLICE.
ISTS panel "Privacy Implications for the Internet of Things" (SPLICE)
We recently had a great conversation with cybersecurity experts to discuss the most pressing security and privacy challenges related to the “Internet of Things” (IOT) devices, such as smart phones, smart watches, smart kitchen appliances and more. If you want to learn about whether your TV is spying on you, the role of IoT devices in surveillance, or even the more technical aspects of federated learning vs the “Hoover” approach with respect to IoT devices, check out the recording of the event here:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-XXmFZD0i1U&feature=youtu.be
Thank you to our awesome panelists and moderator and the 40+ virtual attendees who submitted thought provoking and important questions! Follow the page to stay updated on upcoming panels and events related to cybersecurity, AI, IoT and more related!
Panelists: April Doss, JD (Chair of Cybersecurity and Privacy Practice at Saul Ewing Arnstein & Lehr LLP), Hamed Haddadi, PhD (Professor in Human Centered Systems at Imperial College London), Susan Landau, PhD (Bridge Professor in Cyber Security and Policy), Avi Rubin, PhD (Technical Director of the Johns Hopkins University Information Security Institute)
Moderator: Professor David Kotz
Professor David Kotz named ACM Fellow and recently featured in a Dartmouth video
ProfessorDavid Kotz was named one of 95 new ACM Fellows by The Association for Computing Machinery (ACM) and his citation reads: “For contributions to the security, privacy, and usability of mobile systems.” This is a very prestigious honor and the ACM fellows are recognized to “have driven innovationsthat ushered in significant improvements across many areas of technology, industry, and personal life.”
Recently, Professor Kotz '86 was featured in a Dartmouth video where he talks about theprivacy risks of smart home technology. With the growing use of smart home speakers, smart security cameras, smart water leak sensors, and other smart devices, there are also privacy risks to consider.
Congratulations from ISTS!
NSA Center of Academic Excellence
Dartmouth ISTS is an NSA Center of Academic Excellence in Cybersecurity Research.