LA Times: “2016 election controversy will be ‘studied forever,’ says James Carville, Bill Clinton’s ex-campaign manager, in UCI talk”
James Carville, a Democratic political strategist who was Bill Clinton’s presidential campaign manager in 1992, gave a wide-ranging keynote address Tuesday at UC Irvine on topics including suspected Russian government meddling in the 2016 U.S. presidential election.
Read the full story at The Los Angeles Times.
“Cyber Risk Insurance: How to Live With It Because You Can No Longer Live Without It” March 20, 2018
Tuesday, March 20, 2018
The Cove at UCI Applied Innovation
In 2017, costs linked to just ransomware attacks worldwide were estimated to exceed $5 Billion, up from $325 Million in 2015. Cyber attacks are a dangerous growth industry and none are immune from risk. Defending against an attack is necessary, but is imprecise, uncertain, and rarely sufficient to stave off liabilities. Insuring against loss from an attack is now a necessary safeguard. We are all targets.
You’re invited to a complimentary program presented by UCI and Newmeyer & Dillion. The evening will commence with a social hour including appetizers, beer, wine & soft drinks. Immediately following join panel members in a salon style discussion moderated by Mr. Bryan Cunningham, Esq. Executive Director of the UCI Cybersecurity Policy & Research Institute (CPRI).
Innovation & Tech Today: “Cyberspace’s ‘Whodunnit’ Problem”
The academic and research communities need to create and evaluate more multidisciplinary and data science-driven approaches to provably identifying cyberattacks. For instance, UC Irvine’s Cybersecurity Policy & Research Institute is beginning to address both of those challenges.
Read the full story at Innovation & Tech Today.
Orange County Business Journal: “Blockchain Building Blocks”
The University of California-Irvine held a recent conference devoted to blockchain, a digital ledger technology that shows potential for reliably tracking titles to property; provenance of precious goods; ownership of art and intellectual property; and securing of supply chains for software and other critical areas.
Boise State Public Radio: “Here’s Who Really Has Access To Idaho’s Voter Data”
Politicians and companies aren’t the only ones interested in that data.
Bryan Cunningham, who heads the Cybersecurity Policy & Research Institute at University of California, Irvine, says a lot of hackers will follow what he calls the Willie Sutton rule.
“[Sutton] robbed banks because that’s where the money is. If it’s known, or easily discoverable, that a particular company is acquiring massive amounts of voter data then I would expect them to be targets,” Cunningham says.
Read the full story at Boise State Public Radio.
Using Blockchain to Secure the Supply Chain
Open Rank Faculty Positions in Cybersecurity
The Donald Bren School of Information and Computer Sciences (ICS) at the University of California, Irvine (UCI) is seeking exceptional candidates for two faculty positions at the assistant professor (tenure track) and associate professor (tenured) levels in the area of cybersecurity. However, applicants at a more senior level will also be considered. The two positions are open to all areas of cybersecurity. Of particular interest for one of the positions are candidates with a research interest and track record in both security and software engineering.
In addition to a faculty appointment in one of the departments in ICS, each new faculty member will be affiliated with the Institute for Software Research (ISR) and the Cybersecurity Policy and Research Institute (CPRI), thereby strengthening the ties between the two institutes, as well as creating new opportunities for innovative and multidisciplinary scholarship. ISR addresses socio-technical problems of software engineering. Its members include experts in software engineering as well as human-computer interaction and analysis of computer-supported work. CPRI focuses on legal, policy and technical issues related to cybersecurity and privacy. CPRI is a joint effort among eight schools and divisions across UCI.
Comprehensive story on CPRI by the Orange County Business Journal’s Chris Casacchia.
UCI Institute Helps the Helpless Fight Cybercriminals: Bryan Cunningham’s vision, crafted over the past year to create one of the country’s top cybersecurity policy and prevention centers, is taking shape at the University of California-Irvine.
IAPP: “How three West Coast law schools are filling the cyber-lawyer gap”
The course catalog at the University of California, Irvine School of Law (UCI) doesn’t include cyberlaw. And yet, the school is part of one of the country’s fastest growing cybersecurity initiatives: the UCI Cybersecurity Policy & Research Institute (CPRI). The CPRI is the child of six schools: law, information & computer science, engineering, physical sciences, social ecology, and social sciences. And, though not expressly stated anywhere, CPRI appears to be positioning itself to become the central academic hub of cybersecurity in Southern California. “I wouldn’t quite put it that way,” laughed Bryan Cunningham, the inaugural director of CPRI, when asked if that was UCI’s goal. “That said, we are an outward-facing multi-disciplinary effort focused on addressing technical, legal and policy challenges to cyber-threats.”
Read the full story at the International Association of Privacy Professionals website.
The Recorder: “Cyber Victims Defense Clinic to Launch at California Irvine School of Law”
Law school students will volunteer at the clinic and get cross-disciplinary specialized training in cybersecurity matters. The clinic will help the victims reach out to law enforcement and weigh civil legal options, according to Bryan Cunningham, the institute’s founding executive director.
“Of the key purposes [of the clinic] is to make law school students aware of the technology and policy issues, and get a cross-training approach to these things,” Cunningham told Legaltech News. At some later point, the clinic may also provide specialized training on cybersecurity to prosecutors, defense lawyers and judges, Cunningham said.
Read the story at The Recorder.