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WISE 2011 Speakers

Lorrie Cranor: CyLab, Carnegie Mellon University
Brenda Fellows: Fellows Corporate Consortium
Deborah Frincke: US Department of Defense
Kristen Gates: TRUST

Dorothy Glancy: Santa Clara University School of Law
Leslie Lambert: Juniper Networks
Brad Malin: TRUST, Biomedical Informatics, School of Medicine, Vanderbilt University
Priya Narasimhan: CyLab, Carnegie Mellon University
Michelle Nix: McKesson, Inc.
Joan Peckham: University of Rhode Island
Adrian Perrig: TRUST, Carnegie Mellon University
Theordora Titonis: TTI Technologies, Inc


Lorrie Cranor Lorrie Faith Cranor

Lorrie Faith Cranor is an Associate Professor of Computer Science and of Engineering and Public Policy at Carnegie Mellon University where she is director of the CyLab Usable Privacy and Security Laboratory (CUPS). She teaches courses on privacy, usable security, and computers and society. She is also a co-founder of Wombat Security Technologies, Inc. She came to CMU in December 2003 after seven years at AT&T Labs-Research. While at AT&T she also taught in the Stern School of Business at New York University.

Dr. Cranor has played a key role in building the usable privacy and security research community. She co-edited the seminal book Security and Usability (O'Reilly 2005), and founded the Symposium On Usable Privacy and Security (SOUPS). She also directs an NSF-funded Integrative Graduate Education and Research Traineeship (IGERT) program on usable privacy and security.

Dr. Cranor has authored over 100 research papers on online privacy, usable security, phishing, spam, electronic voting, anonymous publishing, and other topics. She chaired the Platform for Privacy Preferences Project (P3P) Specification Working Group at the World Wide Web Consortium and authored the book Web Privacy with P3P (O'Reilly 2002). In 2003 she was named one of the top 100 innovators 35 or younger by Technology Review magazine. She has received faculty research awards from IBM, Microsoft, and Google.

Dr. Cranor serves on the Board of Directors of the Electronic Frontier Foundation, The Future of Privacy Forum Advisory Board, the DARPA Privacy Panel, and the Washington University in St. Louis Department of Computer Science and Engineering External Advisory Board. She is also a commissioned Kentucky Colonel and a member of USACM. She was chair of the Tenth Conference on Computers Freedom and Privacy (CFP2000) and program committee chair for the 29th Research Conference on Communication, Information and Internet Policy (TPRC 2001). In 2000 she served on the Federal Trade Commission Advisory Committee on Online Access and Security. She also serves on the editorial boards of the journals The Information Society, User Modeling and User-Adapted Interaction: The Journal of Personalization Research, and I/S: A Journal of Law and Policy for the Information Society.

Dr. Cranor consults for companies and non-profits on privacy policies, P3P, usable privacy and security, and technology policy. She has also served as an expert witness in patent litigation and in cases challenging the constitutionality of Internet harmful-to-minors laws, including the ACLU's successful challenge to the 1998 Children's Online Protection Act.

Dr. Cranor received her doctorate degree in Engineering & Policy from Washington University in St. Louis in 1996. She also holds an undergraduate degree and two masters degrees from Washington University. While in graduate school she helped found Crossroads, the ACM Student Magazine, and served as the publication's editor-in-chief for two years.

Dr. Cranor has been studying electronic voting systems since 1994 and in 2000 served on the executive committee of a National Science Foundation sponsored Internet voting taskforce. Since 2004 she has served as an Allegheny County, PA elections poll worker. Dr. Cranor was also a member of the project team that developed the Publius censorship-resistant publishing system. In February 2001, the Publius team was honored by Index on Censorship magazine for the "Best Circumvention of Censorship."

Contact Info:
Lorrie Faith Cranor
Associate Professor, Computer Science and Engineering & Public Policy
Director, CyLab Usable Privacy and Security Laboratory
Carnegie Mellon University
5000 Forbes Avenue
Pittsburgh, PA 15213

Phone: 412-268-7534

Email: lorrie AT cs DOT cmu DOT edu


Dr. Brenda Fellows Brenda Fellows

Brenda Fellows is an Adjunct Faculty Member in the Haas School of Business at the University of California, Berkeley where she teaches Managing Human Resources and Leadership. Dr. Fellows is an Industrial/Organizational Psychologist, President and CEO of Fellows Corporate Consortium, LLC, a global management consulting firm specializing in multinational corporate consultation. She is author of the business book Your Personal Power-Up: Five Steps to Take Control of Your Life and Career, based on her award winning research centering on corporate America. Her forthcoming books, based on current research centering on corporate America are: Strategic Leadership: Psychological Movements Beyond Management, and Size Matters: How Stress, Obesity, and Fear in the Workplace Cause Illness, Low Self Esteem, Low Productivity, and High Societal Costs. Dr. Fellows' award winning research centers on creating effective containers for all persons to work and grow together. She has found that building capacity in people and systems allows organizations and their leaders to add enormous value to outcomes critical to their success.

Dr. Fellows has spent her twenty-year professional career in sales and marketing management, training and development, finance and administration, operations management, regional, district employee, and business development within Fortune 500 corporations. Her expertise is in the areas of industrial/organizational psychology, social psychology, organizational development, organizational behavior, behavioral management, human resources management, and curriculum and instruction.

Dr. Fellows is an Adjunct Professor and Thesis Advisor in the MBA and MIB Programs in the Grenoble Graduate School of Business and Management in Grenoble, France and the London School of Business and Finance in London, England. She has been an Adjunct Faculty Member in bay area graduate and undergraduate business schools: Santa Clara University, Notre Dame de Namur University, San Jose State University and San Francisco State University.

Dr. Fellows received her doctorate with distinction in Industrial/Organizational Psychology, Cognate in Social Psychology and Minor in Human Resources Management in 2003 from the Union Institute and University in Cincinnati, Ohio. She received a Masters Degree in Management with a concentration in Organizational Development and Leadership with distinction from John F. Kennedy University, and a Bachelor of Science Degree in Human Services Administration with a concentration in Marketing from Note Dame de Namur University with honors.

Dr. Fellows’ research interests center on:

  • The relationship of executive leadership to organizational and people performance based on integrated competencies of IQ, EQ and SQ
  • Organizational learning, knowledge management and global corporate strategy
  • Onboarding and socialization of new employees: Impact of compensation, motivation and rewards
  • Face-to-face versus virtual teams: Conflict management, negotiation, implementation and effective use of technology
  • Strategic mentoring programs: Movement beyond the glass and concrete ceiling for women in corporate America and effective communication among men and women
  • Congruence theory and its relationship to organizational and human resources sustainability
  • Human resources management and leadership factors impacting performance
  • Cultural dynamics of organizations: Fiscal and cultural due diligence

Contact Information:
Brenda Fellows, Ph.D.
Fellows Corporate Consortium, LLC
Email: drfellows@fellowsconsortium.com
Office: (650) 345-5896
Direct: (650) 759-0841
Website: http://www.fellowsconsortium.com


Deb Frincke Deborah Frincke

Deborah Frincke joined the Department of Defense as a Deputy Director for Research in 2011. She became an Affiliate Professor with the University of Washington's iSchool (information school) in December 2008.

Deborah worked from 2004-2011 at Pacific Northwest National Laboratory as Chief Scientist for CyberSecurity. Prior to joining PNNL, Dr. Frincke was a (Full) Professor at the University of Idaho, and co-founder/co-director of the U Idaho Center for Secure and Dependable Systems, one of the first such institutions to receive NSA's designation of a national Center of Excellence in Information Assurance Education. She is an enthusiastic charter member of the Department of Energys cyber security grass roots community. She co-founded TriGeo Network Systems, which was recently positioned by Garner in the Leaders Quadrant for security information and event management. She has written over eighty published articles and technical reports.

Dr. Frincke is an active member of several editorial boards, including: Journal of Computer Security, the Elsevier International Journal of Computer Networks, and the International Journal of Information and Computer Security. She co-edits the Security Education Board column for IEEE Security and Privacy, along with Matt Bishop. She is a steering committee member for Recent Advances in Intrusion Detection (RAID) and Systematic Advances in Digital Forensic Engineering (SADFE). She is a member of numerous advisory boards, including the University of Washingtons Governing Board for the I-Schools Center for Cyber Security and Information Assurance and the State of Idahos NASA/EPSCOR Technical Advisory Committee.

Dr. Frincke received her PhD from the University of California, Davis in 1992.

Specialties
Dr. Frincke's research spans a broad cross section of computer security, both open and classified, with a particular emphasis on infrastructure defense and computer security education.

Contact Info:
Deborah Frincke, Ph.D.
Deputy Director for Research
US Department of Defense

Email: dafrinc@nsa.gov (unclassified)
Web: www.defense.gov


Kristen Gates Kristen Gates

Dr. Kristen Gates is the Executive Director of Education for The Team for Research in Ubiquitous Secure Technology (TRUST) at the University of California, Berkeley. Prior to joining TRUST, Dr. Gates was Senior Adjunct Faculty and Faculty Coordinator for Technology Development in the Department of Design and Industry at San Francisco State University. She is responsible for the continued development and implementation of TRUST’s education and diversity programs such as––the Research Experience for Undergraduates (TRUST-REU), Women’s Institute in Summer Enrichment (WISE) for women researchers, Curriculum Development in Security and Information Assurance (CDSIA) for faculty and the Colloquium and Research in Information Technology (SECuR-IT) for graduate students studying cybersecurity. Dr. Gates joined TRUST in 2006.

Prior to joining TRUST, Dr. Gates was Senior Adjunct Faculty and Faculty Coordinator for Technology Development at the College of Creative Arts in the Department of Design and Industry at San Francisco State University. At San Francisco State University, Dr. Gates taught industrial research, digital media, graphic design and product design to undergraduate and graduate students in the department of Design and Industry and was the director of the Center for Community Web Development. Dr. Gates’ award winning community service program Bridging the Digital Divide, in conjunction with Center for Community Web Development, developed over 300+ Websites for underserved community and small business organizations in the San Francisco Bay area. Her program, Bridging the Digital Divide, established the first public-private partnership with the US Small Business Administration at San Francisco State University.

Dr. Gates has a Doctorate in Education from the University of Southern California and holds both a Master of Arts and Bachelor of Arts in Industrial Arts from San Francisco State University.

In addition to her work in higher education, Dr. Gates has worked in interactive digital media, print and film, and has produced multiple exhibits. A longtime resident of Richmond, California, Dr. Gates is active in many civic and community organizations and is a board member of the Richmond High School Engineering Academy and the East Brothers Light Station. In 1995, she was appointed to the Richmond Arts and Culture Commission where she served two terms as commission chair.

Contact Info:
Kristen Gates, EdD
Executive Director of Education
TRUST
University of California, Berkeley
392 Corh Hall, Berkeley, CA 94720
Email: kgates@eecs.berkeley.edu
Web: www.truststc.org


Dorthy Glancy Dorothy Glancy

DOROTHY J. GLANCY is Professor of Law at Santa Clara University School of Law. A graduate of Wellesley College (B.A.) and Harvard Law School (J.D.), she was also a postgraduate Fellow in Law and the Humanities at Harvard University. Professor Glancy concentrates on legal issues related to privacy, intellectual property, land use and technology. She is admitted to the bars of both California and the District of Columbia and practiced law in Washington, D.C. She served as counsel to the United States Senate Judiciary Subcommittee on Constitutional Rights (assisting Senator Ervin in the Watergate investigations) and in the Office of General Counsel of the United States Department of Agriculture. Professor Glancy is a Research Fellow of the Gruter Institute for Law and Behavioral Research and works with Santa Clara University’s Center for Science, Technology and Society on issues related to technology and law. She is a member of the legal committee of the California Privacy and Security Advisory Board that advises the California Office of Health Information Integrity. She chairs the e-Practices Subcommittee of the Court Technology Advisory Committee of the Judicial Council of California.

Professor Glancy was the principal investigator and director of a legal research project regarding intelligent transportation systems (ITS) and privacy. Since then, she has worked with the Metropolitan Transportation Commission in the San Francisco Bay Area on the design and operation of the traffic surveillance aspects of the San Francisco Bay Area’s 511 system. In 2005 and 2007 she conducted the first privacy audits of the portion of 511 known as Traffic Watch, a network of toll tag readers located along highways in the Bay Area. She assisted the US Department of Transportation in the development of Vehicle Infrastructure Integration (VII), now part of IntelliDrive®, and drafted the VII Privacy Policies Framework (2007). In connection with the American Association of Motor Vehicle Administrators, Professor Glancy has also advised about privacy issues related to driver’s and vehicle licences. She helped produce the RURAL INTERSTATE CORRIDOR COMMUNICATIONS STUDY (a 2007 Report to Congress) for the Federal Highway Administration.

Professor Glancy is Co-Chair of 2010 Computers, Freedom and Privacy, a twenty-year-old conference sponsored by the Association for Computing Machinery.

Contact Info:
Dorothy J. Glancy
Professor of Law
Santa Clara Law
Santa Clara University
500 El Camino Real
Office: Heafey 222
Santa Clara, California 95053

Email: dglancy@scu.edu

Phone: (408) 554-4075


Leslie Lambert Leslie Lambert

Leslie is Vice President of Information Technology at Juniper Networks where she reports to the CIO as the Chief Information Security Officer. Leslie is responsible for overall IT Security Management, including intrusion detection, threat vulnerability assessments, incident management, security awareness, prevention and protection against SPAM and malware attacks, policies/standards/procedures development and deployment.

Prior to joining Juniper Networks, Leslie was with Sun Microsystems, Inc. and held several critical IT roles: Chief Information Security Officer, Vice President of IT Strategy and Architecture, Vice President of Service Management and Systems Engineering Practices, Vice President of Demand Creation Systems IT, as well as Vice President of both the iPlanet and Software Systems Group divisions at Sun. Other key IT roles at Sun included: Director of Information Technology for Sun Express, JavaSoft, and Sun Microelectronics, Sun IT Enterprise Architect, and the Director of Internet Commerce.

Leslie has 30 years of experience in both Information Technology and technical/business infrastructure. Her experiences range from Control Systems Design to the delivery, implementation, and management of IT systems and infrastructure. Prior to Sun, Leslie was with Intergraph Corp. and Fluor Daniel in key Customer Engineering, IT, and Control Systems Design roles. Her experience covers the industries of oil and gas, engineering and construction, evaluation research, customer training, CAD/CAE, and Information Technology, where she gained significant hands-on operational, architectural, and management experience.

Leslie holds an MBA with an emphasis in Finance and Marketing, as well as an MA and BA in Experimental Psychology (measurement, evaluation, statistics, techniques of experimental research). She also has degrees in Mathematics and Engineering Technology, and has completed graduate- level study in Computer Science.

Industry Awards
• CSO Magazine honored Lambert with their 2010 Compass Award
• Computerworld Magazine honored Lambert as one of “Computerworld's Premier 100 IT Leaders for 2009”.
• Selected by the Anita Borg Institute (ABI) in 2006, and continues to serve as an ABI Ambassador to help advance technical professional women within corporations
• CIO Magazine honored Lambert with their prestigious “Ones to Watch” 2005 Award
• Selected by the YWCA of Silicon Valley as a winner of the 2005 Tribute to Women and Industry (TWIN) Award

Contact info:
Leslie Lambert
Juniper Networks
Sunnyvale, CA, 94089
Web: www.juniper.net/us/en/


Brad Malin Malin on the cover of Genome Tech Brad Malin

Bradley Malin is an Assistant Professor of Biomedical Informatics in the School of Medicine and an Assistant Research Professor of Computer Science in the School of Engineering at Vanderbilt University. He is the founder and current director of the Health Information Privacy Laboratory (HIPLab), an interdisciplinary endeavor that was established to address the growing need for data privacy research and development for the rapidly expanding health information technology sector. The HIPLab is funded through various grants from the National Science Foundation and National Institutes of Health to construct technologies that enable privacy in the context of real world organizational, political, and health information architectures. In addition to its role as a scientific research program, since 2007 the HIPLab has functioned as a data privacy consultation service for the Electronic Medical Records and Genomics (eMERGE) network, a consortium sponsored by the National Human Genome Research Institute and National Institute of General Medical Sciences.

Under the direction of Dr. Malin, the HIPLab has made contributions to a number of health-related areas, including intelligent auditing technologies to protect electronic medical records from misuse in the context of primary care, as well as algorithms to formally anonymize patient information disseminated for secondary research purposes. Notably, their investigations on the empirical risks to health information re-identification have been cited by the Federal Trade Commission in the Federal Register and certain privacy enhancing technologies they have developed have been featured in popular media outlets and blogs, including Nature News, Scientific American, and Wired magazine. Research artifacts from the HIPLab have received several awards of distinction from the American and International Medical Informatics Associations and Dr. Malin was honored as a recipient of the Presidential Early Career Award for Scientists and Engineers (PECASE), the highest honor bestowed by the U.S. government on outstanding scientists and engineers beginning their independent careers.

Dr. Malin completed his education at Carnegie Mellon University, where he received a bachelor's in biological sciences, a master's in machine learning, a master's in public policy and management, and a doctorate in computer science. Further details can be found at http://www.hiplab.org/people/malin.

Contact Info:
Bradley Malin, Ph.D.
Assistant Professor
Director, Health Information Privacy Lab
Dept of Biomedical Informatics
School of Medicine
Vanderbilt University
Email: b.malin@vanderbilt.edu
URL: www.hiplab.org/people/malin


Priya Narasimhan Priya Narasimhan

Prof. Priya Narasimhan is an Associate Professor with the Electrical & Computer Engineering Department, and Director of the CyLab Mobility Research Center, at Carnegie Mellon University. Her research interests lie in the fields of dependable distributed systems, embedded systems and mobile systems. Her research has earned her a Alfred Sloan Fellowship, the 2009 Carnegie Science Center's Emerging Female Scientist Award, an NSF CAREER Award, a Best Paper Award, the 2001 UCSB Lancaster Outstanding Doctoral Dissertation Award and two IBM Faculty Partnership Awards. Her teaching earned her the 2008 Eta Kappa Nu (Carnegie Mellon Sigma Chapter) Excellence in Teaching Award.

She is the President and Founder of YinzCam, Inc., a company focused on mobile live streaming and experiential technologies for live events. She has also previously served as the CTO and, later, the VP of Engineering of Eternal Systems, Inc., a startup company that commercialized the results of her Ph.D. research to develop and sell 24x7 highly available platforms and solutions. Her research greatly influenced the development of the Fault Tolerant CORBA industrial standard.

She teaches the junior-level and senior-level capstone undergraduate Embedded Real-Time Systems courses. She also started a new graduate-level course on Sports Technology at Carnegie Mellon University.

Her spare time is devoted to to watching professional (American) football games. She is a rabid fan of the Pittsburgh Penguins and the Pittsburgh Steelers. Let's go, Pens! Here we go, Steelers!

Contact Info:
Priya Narasimhan, Ph.D.
2202 Collaborative Innovation Center
Carnegie Mellon University
5000 Forbes Avenue
Pittsburgh, PA 15213

Phone: (412)-268-8801
Email: priya@cs.cmu.edu


Michelle Nix Michelle Nix

Michelle Nix is Director of IT Risk Management at the Fortune 15 Company, McKesson. Michelle’s role at McKesson is to manage the IT Risk Management program for the $100 billion US Pharmaceuticals division. Michelle interacts with senior management and other internal and external risk assessing organizations to provide program level reporting, governance, guidance, education and awareness.

Michelle’s background is in health care where she has more than 22 years experience. She has held a number of positions in this industry including pharmaceutical research and development, administration, quality improvement, project management, operations, IT systems support and IT Risk Management. Michelle also has government standards setting experience. Specifically, in California, Michelle is the Co-chair of the California Privacy and Security Advisory Board (CalPSAB) Privacy Committee which focuses on providing state-level privacy standards for health information exchange.

Michelle obtained her Bachelor of Science degree in Biopsychology, Bachelor of Arts degree in Biology from University of California, Santa Barbara and is Masters prepared in Healthcare Administration from Golden Gate University. Her areas of specialty are clinical outcomes, quality improvement, privacy and security for Health Information Exchange models, IT Risk Management and most recently, ISO 27001 standards implementation.

  • Certificates and Education:
  • CGEIT, CHPS, GSLC, CRISC, ITIL V3 Foundations
  • BS in Biopsychology , University of California, Santa Barbara
  • BA in Biology, University of California, Santa Barbara
  • Masters in Healthcare Administration, Golden Gate University

Contact Info:

Michelle Nix
Director of IT Risk Management
McKesson, Inc.
One Post Street
San Francisco, CA 94104
415-983-7101
email:


Joan Peckham Joan Peckham

Joan Peckham is a professor of computer science at the University of Rhode Island (URI). Her area of scholarship is conceptual data modeling which she has applied to several interdisciplinary domains including bioinformatics, building evacuation, and transportation. Joan has also served as co-PI on an NSF ADVANCE institutional transformation project at URI and she is interested in promoting the careers of underrepresented and underserved groups. She has recently served as a program director at NSF in the CISE (Computer and Information Science and Engineering) directorate and in OCI (Office of Cyberinfrastructure) with a focus on education and workforce programs. On August 1, 2011 she will become the chair of the Department of Computer Science and Statistics at URI.

Contact Info:

Joan Peckham, PhD
Office Tyler 253
Dept. of Computer Science and Statistics
Tyler Hall
9 Greenhouse Road, Suite 2
University of Rhode Island
Kingston, RI, 02881
Telephone (401) 874-2701
Fax (401) 874-4617
Email joan@cs.uri.edu
Web: www.cs.uri.edu/about-us/people/joan-peckham/


Adrian Perrig Adrian Perrig

Adrian Perrig is a Professor in Electrical and Computer Engineering, Engineering and Public Policy, and Computer Science at Carnegie Mellon University. Adrian serves as the technical director for Carnegie Mellon's Cybersecurity Laboratory (CyLab). He earned his Ph.D. degree in Computer Science from Carnegie Mellon University, and spent three years during his Ph.D. degree at the University of California at Berkeley. He received his B.Sc. degree in Computer Engineering from the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Lausanne (EPFL). Adrian's research revolves around building secure systems and includes network security, trustworthy computing and security for social networks. More specifically, he is interested in trust establishment, trustworthy code execution in the presence of malware, and how to design secure next-generation networks. More information about his research is available on http://www.ece.cmu.edu/~adrian/ web page. He is a recipient of the NSF CAREER award in 2004, IBM faculty fellowships in 2004 and 2005, the Sloan research fellowship in 2006, the Security 7 award in the category of education by the Information Security Magazine in 2009, and the Benjamin Richard Teare teaching award in 2011.

Contact Info:

Adrian Perrig, PhD
Carnegie Mellon University
2107 CIC
4720 Forbes Avenue
Pittsburgh, PA, USA 15213
Web: www.ece.cmu.edu/~adrian/


Theordora Titonis Theordora Titonis

Theodora Titonis is an innovative visionary in technology and cyber security. Ms. Titonis started programming computers at the age of seven, creating her first software inventions on the TRS-80 using the BASIC programming language. During the dot-com era, she developed software and provided cyber security expertise to Citigroup, Data Broadcasting, and Gateway Computers. In 2001, Ms. Titonis founded TTi Technologies, Inc. and in 2002 she was called upon as one of the first cyber security experts for the newly established U.S. Department of Homeland Security. In 2009, TTi co-founded the West Virginia Smart Sensor Supercomputing Center to support a research program for the Department of Defense. Ms. Titonis combines expert knowledge with leading edge technologies to provide comprehensive cyber security solutions to TTi's customers.

Contact Info:

Theordora Titonis
TTI Technologies Inc.
WV Smart Sensor Supercomputing Center
1025 Market St, 5th Floor
Wheeling, WV 26003
(304) 233-5680
Web: www.ttitech.net


 

 

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