New Solutions for CybersecurityUnavailable
Howard Shrobe leads the cybersecurity initiative at MIT's Computer Science & Artificial Intelligence Lab (CSAIL).
David Shrier is a Professor of Practice (AI and Innovation) with Imperial College Business School, co-director of the Trusted AI Alliance (a collective of more than 3,000 AI researchers across Imperial College London, MIT, University of Oxford, Harvard and University of Edinburgh focused on building a better world through responsible and trusthworthy AI), and a Visiting Scholar with MIT's School of Engineering. He previously held a dual appointment at MIT and University of Oxford where his initiatives directly drove over $1 billion of financial support for MIT, Harvard and Oxford. David also is active in the private sector having led more than $10 billion of corporate growth programs and an IPO on the NYSE, and having made three dozen angel investments through his venture studio Visionary Future. With MIT Press, David has co-edited
Alex “Sandy” Pentland directs the MIT-wide initiative MIT Connection Science. Called one of the “seven most powerful data scientists in the world” by
Experts from MIT explore recent advances in cybersecurity, bringing together management, technical, and sociological perspectives.
Ongoing cyberattacks, hacks, data breaches, and privacy concerns demonstrate vividly the inadequacy of existing methods of cybersecurity and the need to develop new and better ones. This book brings together experts from across MIT to explore recent advances in cybersecurity from management, technical, and sociological perspectives. Leading researchers from MIT's Computer Science & Artificial Intelligence Lab, the MIT Media Lab, MIT Sloan School of Management, and MIT Lincoln Lab, along with their counterparts at Draper Lab, the University of Cambridge, and SRI, discuss such varied topics as a systems perspective on managing risk, the development of inherently secure hardware, and the Dark Web. The contributors suggest approaches that range from the market-driven to the theoretical, describe problems that arise in a decentralized, IoT world, and reimagine what optimal systems architecture and effective management might look like.
Contributors YNadav Aharon, Yaniv Altshuler, Manuel Cebrian, Nazli Choucri, André DeHon, Ryan Ellis, Yuval Elovici, Harry Halpin, Thomas Hardjono, James Houghton, Keman Huang, Mohammad S. Jalali, Priscilla Koepke, Yang Lee, Stuart Madnick, Simon W. Moore, Katie Moussouris, Peter G. Neumann, Hamed Okhravi, Jothy Rosenberg, Hamid Salim,Michael Siegel, Diane Strong, Gregory T. Sullivan, Richard Wang, Robert N. M. Watson, Guy Zyskind
An MIT Connection Science and Engineering Book
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Table of Contents
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I: Management, Organizations & Strategy
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II: Architecture
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III: Systems
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