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SUMMARY:Can I trust my television
DTSTART:20140604T103000
DTSTAMP:20260406T121027Z
UID:27d7a1239a5560ed1af72761e9846d9c35378cb9a759d1bf5bc7e58c
CATEGORIES:Conferences - Seminars
DESCRIPTION:Andrew CLARK\, Royal Holloway University London\nJohn Stewart\
 , Vice President and Chief Security Officer of Cisco reported in 2010 that
  by the end of the year each of us would have on average 5 ip connected de
 vices.  He further predicted that by the end of 2013 we would each have 1
 40 devices (a world population in excess of 1 Trillion devices).  One cat
 alyst for this change is the exponential growth of ip based appliances suc
 h as IPTV\, Blu Ray and even refrigerators.  Combine this with smartphone
 s and wifi enabled players and we realise that the very shape of our perso
 nal networks is changing.  Did we reach Stewart’s predictions by the en
 d of 2013?\nIn this talk we shall discuss a range of implications of this 
 growth including\;\nFirstly the suggestion that this richness of potential
  forensic data should be an investigator’s dream – more data equals mo
 re information equals more chance of evidential corroboration\, but with t
 his explosion comes increased time to investigate and increased complexity
  of investigation.\nSecondly that for many years we have relied on a prote
 ctive security model where the end point devices can exert some measure of
  control (anti virus\, anti malware etc) but these new appliances will not
  have the capability to undertake the same level of protection.  If these
  appliances are insecure\, what is the likelihood that they can be comprom
 ised for malicious use?  Is there a risk that their owners may be accused
  of crimes that they did not commit?  Is this the new “Trojan defence
 ” vector?
LOCATION:BC 420 https://plan.epfl.ch/?room==BC%20420
STATUS:CONFIRMED
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