ETSecIoT 2020- Program

Detailed Program


Bio: Prof. Helge Janicke is the Research Director of the Cyber Security Cooperative Research Centre, Australia. He is affiliated with Edith Cowan University and holds a visiting Professorship in Cyber Security at De Montfort University. Prof. Janicke’s research interests are in the area of cyber security, in particular with applications in critical infrastructures using cyber-physical systems, SCADA and Industrial Control Systems. Prof. Janicke’s current research investigates the application of Agile Techniques to Cyber Incident Response in Critical Infrastructure, Managing Human Errors that lead to Cyber Incidents, and research on Cyberwarfare & Cyberpeacekeeping. Prof. Janicke established DMU’s Cyber Technology Institute and its Airbus Centre of Excellence in SCADA Cyber Security and Forensics Research. He has been the Head of School of Computer Science at De Montfort University, before taking up his current position as Research Director for the Cyber Security CRC. Prof. Janicke founded the International Symposium on Industrial Control System Cyber Security Research (ICS-CSR) and contributed over 100 peer reviewed articles and conference papers to the field that resulted from his collaborative research with industry partners such as Airbus, BT, Deloitte, Rolls-Royce, QinetiQ, and General-Dynamics.

Keynote

Securing the next Industrial Revolution

With more connected devices than people on this planet, businesses shift in their operations and create new revenue streams that utilise this unprecedented level of global connectivity. Traditional industries are future proofing themselves and look at innovative, highly agile manufacturing approaches that are the backbone of our factories of the future and underpin the success of Industry 4.0. In this talk I will revisit the opportunities this next Industrial Revolution can bring, caution to separate the hype from the real innovations, and in particular consider the cyber security threats that we must navigate to ensure a resilient ecosystem that benefits us all.

(Best Paper)

Progressive Monitoring of IoT Networks Using SDN and Cost-Effective Traffic Signatures

Arman Pashamokhtari, Hassan Habibi Gharakheili and Vijay Sivaraman

Bio: Arman Pashamokhtari is a first-year Ph.D. student studying at Electrical Engineering and Telecommunication school at UNSW. His research topic is IoT cybersecurity. He received his bachelor of science in software engineering from Amirkabir University of Technology (Tehran polytechnic) in Iran. His research interests include computer networks, IoT devices, machine learning, and network security.

(2nd Best Paper)

An Efficient Privacy-preserving IoT System for Face Recognition

Wanli Xue , Wen Hu , Praveen Gauranvaramzy, Aruna Seneviratne and Sanjay Jha

Bio: Wanli Xue received the Ph.D. degree from the School of Computer Science and Engineering, University of New South Wales, Australia. He is currently a Research Fellow with the Cyber Security CRC and the School of Computer Science and Engineering, University of New South Wales. His research interests include security and privacy issues in cyber physical systems and IoT, including highly efficient privacy-preserving techniques for IoT as well as IoT-related sensing systems and data analytic services.

Security and Forensics in the Internet of Things: Research Advances and Challenges

Wencheng Yang, Michael N. Johnstone, Leslie F. Sikos and Song Wang

Bio: Dr. Wencheng Yang is a postdoctoral researcher of Security Research Institute (SRI) at Edith Cowan University (ECU), Australia. He has more than ten years’ research experience in the area of cyber security, especially biometric security and network security. He has authored a number of high-quality papers published in high-impact journals, e.g., IEEE Transactions on Information Forensics and Security, and Pattern Recognition.

Assessing the Suitability of Traditional Botnet Detection against Contemporary Threats

Ashley Woodiss-Field and Michael N. Johnstone

Bio: Ashley Woodiss-Field is a PhD student at Edith Cowan University. His current research centre around assessing the capabilities of traditional botnet detection techniques on contemporary IoT-based botnets. Ashley is also a Security Devops Engineer at Sapien Cyber.

Threat Detection in the IoT Domain:Challenges and Future Directions

Nickson M. Karie, Nor Masri Sahri and Paul Haskell-Dowland

Bio: Dr. Nickson M. Karie is a Cyber Security CRC Research Fellow at the ECU Security Research Institute within the School of Science. His Primary area of focus is in Real Time Monitoring of Cyber Security Threats but also engages the industry in Consultancy Services in Cyber Security and Forensics