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Information Security Plenary Session
Panelist: Professor William J Caelli, AO, Assistant Dean - Strategy and
Innovation, Faculty of Information Technology, Queensland University of
Technology
Topic: "ID Theft: A National Security Threat"
March 29, 11.25 – 12.25
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Abstract:
The pervasive use of mobile devices such as cell phones, personal
digital assistants, laptop PCs, and others has meant that valuable
personal information regularly stored in such devices is now backed up
on the home and/or business PC system. Access to such detailed
information, as well as allied personal data and documents from an
unprotected or minimally protected home or small business system, means
that fraudulent identity documents may be created based upon stolen
data. The increased detail and volume of such data means that such
storage becomes a threat to national security if electronic documents
may be accessed, used and even appropriate detailed paper forms created.
At a national level we have a new pervasive
threat to security through simplified identity theft.
Biography:
Prof Caelli is the Assistant Dean – Strategy and Innovation in the
Faculty of Information Technology at the Queensland University of
Technology (QUT), Brisbane, Queensland, Australia. He co-leads the cyber
law and policy research group in the Information Security Institute (ISI)
at QUT which incorporated the Information Security Research Centre (ISRC),
a research centre of which he was the Founding Director in 1988. He is a
member of the “IT Security” and chairs the “Futures” Expert Advisory
Groups (EAG) to Australia’s Critical Infrastructure Advisory Council (CIAC)
established under its Federal Government sponsored Trusted Information
Sharing Network (TISN). He also serves on the advisory board to
Australia’s AISEP (Australian Information Security Evaluation Program)
which involves accreditation under the international “Common Criteria”.
He has over 42 years of
experience in the IT industry, with over 30 years involvement in
information security and cryptography. He founded ERACOM Pty Ltd in 1979
(now ERACOM Technologies Pty Ltd), a company that develops and markets
advanced, integrated cryptographic systems and information security
products around the world. These products and systems particularly
address the needs of the banking and finance industries worldwide. He
received his PhD from the Australian National University (ANU) in
Nuclear Physics in 1972. He is a Fellow of the Australian Computer
Society (ACS) and the Institute for Combinatorics as well as being a
Senior Member of the IEEE. In 2002 he was presented with the Kristian
Beckman Award by Technical Committee 11 of IFIP, the International
Federation for Information Processing based in Vienna, Austria, for his
international work in information security. He received the Pearcey
Medal in September 2002 for his lifelong work in and contributions to
the IT industry. He is a Board Member of the USA’s Colloquium for
Information Systems Security Education (CISSE). Computerworld Australia
has designated him as a “Computer Pioneer”. He was made an Officer in
the Order of Australia (AO) in the January 2003 Australia Day honours
list. Professor Caelli’s research and education interests lie in trusted
computer systems and networks, cryptography and its integration into
systems as well as in the legal, social and political implications of
information security and related matters. |