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This session, organised by the International Road Federation (IRF), Union for the Mediterranean (UfM), International Federation of Consulting Engineers (FIDIC), will focus on how low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) and emerging economies can build resilient transport networks while managing limited resources. Mike Evans, Director, Global Roads and Streets Leader, Europe Transport Leader, ARUP moderates this session and speakers include Gonzalo Alcaraz, Acting Director General, International Road Federation; Francesc Carbonell, Head of Sector for Transport, Union for the Mediterranean; Reinaldo Fioravanti, Group Head of Transportation, Inter-American Development Bank (IDB); Dhouha Najjar, Acting Deputy Secretary General for Transport and Urban Development, Union for the Mediterranean; Nicolas Peltier, Global Director for Transport, World Bank; Susanna Zammataro, CEO, International Federation of Consulting Engineers. This session takes place during the International Transport Forum’s 2025 Summit “Transport Resilience to Global Shocks” held on 21 May 2025 in Leipzig, Germany.

ITF Secretary-General meets with Francisco Lima, Secretary-General, SIECA during the International Transport Forum’s 2025 Summit in Leipzig.

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FORTUNE Brainstorm Tech

December 1st, 2021

Half Moon Bay, CA

 

9:05 AM

DEFENSE AGAINST THE DARK ARTS

Morgan Stanley alumnus and military vet Jen Easterly is the second person to lead the U.S. Homeland Security Department's Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA). She's got her work cut out for her as she attempts to secure U.S. cyberspace in the face of so many espionage campaigns, ransomware, and cyberattacks. Hear how she plans to tilt the balance in favor of the defenders.

Speaker:

Jen Easterly, Director, Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency

Interviewer: Robert Hackett, a16z Crypto

 

Photograph by Nick Otto for FORTUNE BRAINSTORM TECH

This session, organised by the International Road Federation (IRF), Union for the Mediterranean (UfM), International Federation of Consulting Engineers (FIDIC), will focus on how low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) and emerging economies can build resilient transport networks while managing limited resources. Mike Evans, Director, Global Roads and Streets Leader, Europe Transport Leader, ARUP moderates this session and speakers include Gonzalo Alcaraz, Acting Director General, International Road Federation; Francesc Carbonell, Head of Sector for Transport, Union for the Mediterranean; Reinaldo Fioravanti, Group Head of Transportation, Inter-American Development Bank (IDB); Dhouha Najjar, Acting Deputy Secretary General for Transport and Urban Development, Union for the Mediterranean; Nicolas Peltier, Global Director for Transport, World Bank; Susanna Zammataro, CEO, International Federation of Consulting Engineers. This session takes place during the International Transport Forum’s 2025 Summit “Transport Resilience to Global Shocks” held on 21 May 2025 in Leipzig, Germany.

Cyber radar academy provides the best security training courses at an affordable cost in the USA. For more info visit: www.cyberradaracademy.com/courses/online-cyber-security-t...

Ministers’ Roundtable on Strategic Public Transport Funding: Delivering Sustainable and Equitable Mobility at the International Transport Forum Summit on 22 May 2025 in Leipzig, Germany. Geraldine de Bastion, Political Scientist moderates the session and speakers include Jill Warren, Chief Executive Officer, Federal Cyclists' Federation (ECF);Antonia Höög, Chief Sustainability Officer, Keolis; Billy Hann, CEO, Dublin Bus; Joseph Bukari Nikpe, Minister of Transport, Ghana, Juan Carlos Muñoz, Minister of Transport and Telecommunications, Chile; Liubov Schachtner, CEO, Siemens Mobility Latin America and Brazil; Maja Vukićević, Minister of Transport, Montenegro; Marc Rozendal, CEO of EIT Urban Mobility; Pablo Camacho, Vice Minister of Infrastructure, MOPT Costa Rica; Philippe Tabarot, Minister of Transport, France; Rahman Hummatov, Deputy Minister of Digital Development and Transport, Azerbaijan; Seán Canney, Minister of State, Ireland; Sylvain Haon, Senior Director Strategy and Transformation at UITP and Tomas Serebrisky, Manager at the Infrastructure and Energy Sector, IDB. The session addresses sustainable public transport funding and strategies for equitable mobility.

Organised by EIT Urban Mobility, this session showcases innovative urban mobility solutions from startups within its portfolio, aiming to accelerate the shift toward more liveable cities. Speakers include Matteo Forte, CEO & Founder of SWITCH; Maximilian Schöffer, Co-Founder & CCO of Futurail; and Daniel Serra, Impact Ventures Director of EIT Urban Mobility. The session takes place during the International Transport Forum’s 2025 Summit on “Transport Resilience to Global Shocks" held in Leipzig on 22 May 2025.

Sponsored by Porzio Life Sciences, LLC, Porzio, Bromberg & Newman, P.C., and the Seton Hall Law Center for Health & Pharmaceutical Law & Policy. Exploring data in the life sciences industry. Life sciences companies at all stages are increasingly becoming targets for external cyberattacks and data incidents. Industry leaders agree that the risk profile for companies in the life science industry is significant, citing high levels of revenue, significant investments in R&D, a reliance on technology systems and providers, and internal risks as driving factors in the trend. Attendees will hear from industry leaders who will discuss multiple aspects of cybersecurity, data privacy, and global compliance that are unique to life sciences companies.

Competitors tackled real-world cybersecurity challenges facing their mini electric grid such as cyberattacks and changing weather.

 

In a room buzzing with anticipation and the hum of computers, a team from University of Central Florida clinched the title at the 2023 CyberForce Competition® held November 4. The event is hosted by the Department of Energy’s (DOE) Office of Cybersecurity, Energy Security and Emergency Response (CESER) and supported by DOE’s Argonne.

 

To find out more, visit this article University of Central Florida team crowned champion at the 2023 CyberForce Competition®

023

McKinsey Global Infrastructure Initiative Summit

Tokyo, Japan

 

Thursday, October 20th, 2022

10:35–11:10

BUILDING CYBER RESILIENCE

Cyberattacks on critical infrastructure, such as the Colonial Pipeline, are increasing in frequency and size. Concurrently, infrastructure operators are implementing new technologies that increase efficiencies, but these could also make their assets more vulnerable to cyberattacks. How can the industry embrace digital adoption while managing cyberthreats? What can be done about zero-day exploits—that is, cyberattacks that occur the same day a vulnerability is discovered by a hacker? What preventive strategies might reduce downtime?

 

Panelists:

Mark Fialkowski, President Mobility Solutions, Parsons

Marc Ganzi, Chief Executive Officer, Digital Bridge

Shinichi Yokohama, Chief Information Security Officer, EVP Security and Trust, NTT Group

Moderator: Swarna Ramanathan, Partner, McKinsey & Company

 

Photograph by McKinsey Global Infrastructure/Stuart Isett

ITF Secretary-General meets with H.E. Eng Khamis Mohammed AL-SHAMAKHI, Undersecretary of the Ministry of Transport OMAN during the International Transport Forum's 2025 Summit in Leipzig.

Organised by the Transformative Urban Mobility Initiative (TUMI), this session reflects on the global impact of the TUMI E-Bus Mission, which works with cities across Asia, Africa, and Latin America to accelerate the shift to electric buses. Speakers include Rabea Schmecht (GIZ), Tu-My Tran (ICLEI) and Ben Welle (World Resources Institute). This session is held during the International Transport Forum’s 2025 Summit on “Transport Resilience to Global Shocks” in Leipzig on May 20, 2025.

Ministers' Roundtable on Ukraine held during the International Transport Forum’s 2025 Summit on “Transport Resilience to Global Shocks" in Leipzig on 22 May 2025.

 

ITF Secretary-General Young Tae Kim meets with CEO of FIDIC, Susanna Zammataro during the International Transport Forum’s 2025 Summit on “Transport Resilience to Global Shocks” in Leipzig on May 23, 2025.

ORNL researcher Sam Hollifield stands next to the tractor-trailer he uses to research cyberattacks on vehicles hauling radioactive sources. Credit: Liz Neunsinger/ORNL, U.S. Dept. of Energy

Am 68. Social Media Gipfel zeigten Beatrice Kübli, Projektleiterin bei der Schweizerischen Kriminalprävention (SKP), und Sophus Siegenthaler, Gründer, Managing Partner und IT-Security Engineer bei der Berner cyllective AG, wie Cyberattacken auf Organisationen und Unternehmen ausgeübt werden, welche Vorkehrungen für einen guten Schutz nötig sind und wie Mitarbeitende wirkungsvoll sensibilisiert werden können.

 

Photocredits: Samuel Letsch, s.letsch@outlook.com

028

FORTUNE Brainstorm Tech

December 1st, 2021

Half Moon Bay, CA

 

9:05 AM

DEFENSE AGAINST THE DARK ARTS

Morgan Stanley alumnus and military vet Jen Easterly is the second person to lead the U.S. Homeland Security Department's Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA). She's got her work cut out for her as she attempts to secure U.S. cyberspace in the face of so many espionage campaigns, ransomware, and cyberattacks. Hear how she plans to tilt the balance in favor of the defenders.

Speaker:

Jen Easterly, Director, Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency

Interviewer: Robert Hackett, a16z Crypto

 

Photograph by Nick Otto for FORTUNE BRAINSTORM TECH

Sponsored by Porzio Life Sciences, LLC, Porzio, Bromberg & Newman, P.C., and the Seton Hall Law Center for Health & Pharmaceutical Law & Policy. Exploring data in the life sciences industry. Life sciences companies at all stages are increasingly becoming targets for external cyberattacks and data incidents. Industry leaders agree that the risk profile for companies in the life science industry is significant, citing high levels of revenue, significant investments in R&D, a reliance on technology systems and providers, and internal risks as driving factors in the trend. Attendees will hear from industry leaders who will discuss multiple aspects of cybersecurity, data privacy, and global compliance that are unique to life sciences companies.

Inter-American Defense College Leadership Welcomes representatives from the U.S. Cyber Command (USCYBERCOM) for a speaking engagement at the IADC Campus on Fort Lesley J. McNair, Washington, D.C., Feb. 14, 2023. The distinguished guest spoke about USCYBERCOM and its mission. USCYBERCOM is responsible for protecting the military's information networks from cyberattacks and for conducting offensive cyber operations when directed to do so by the President of the United States or the Secretary of Defense. USCYBERCOM works closely with other U.S. government agencies and international partners to promote cybersecurity and to defend against cyber threats to U.S. national security. (U.S. Air Force photo by Tech. Sgt. Mozer O. Da Cunha)

  

All of us have lost someone to the maelstrom of the madness, the confusion of the crazy, the innards of the insanity. We've seen otherwise rational people fall prey to delusions, subscribe to conspiracies, and fuel their paranoia through the warm path of the social media misinformation swamp.

 

I've long been watching all of this with the unease common to most rational, logical, and sane people. I dare not wade into the debate, knowing that all too quickly, those who have been sucked down into the conspiracy wormhole will rise up in righteous madness. I know I've lost a few friends along the way, and I always ponder the issue of how otherwise intelligent people can fall into a world of the absolutely irrational. I don't bother trying to debate with them; it seems that they have devoted much time to empower themselves with information from within the conspiracy swap, eager to do nothing more with their lives than to fight within a debate. I have better things to do with my time. I just feel sad for them.

 

As a futurist, I've long had to pay attention to the issue though. After all, while it's easy to predict the future, it's not easy to predict the implications of madness-driven volatility. I have written about the implications of this in my post The Dark Underside of a Usually Optimistic Future - specifically, point 2. I truly believe that at some point in the future, the medical and psychological community will have identified that there is, indeed, some unique new form of illness that did not previously exist.

 

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Acceleration of mental illness: we are seeing a new form of collaborative mental illness driven by the connectivity of the Internet, and years from now it will be diagnosed as such. This is not any type of routine mental illness – this is full-on whack-a-doodle loopy-doo full-on-gone type of crazy. Like, beyond batshit. You know them when you see them; you feel for their families. This has obviously become a massive part of the political agenda – people subscribe to the craziest of conspiracy theories. Your crazy uncle is now everywhere all at once – you are surrounded by too many crazy uncles. Crazy feeds on crazy, and so the new iterative insanity loop drives more insanity. It won’t end well.

 

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What I do wonder about as a futurist is this - what are the implications of all this going forward, not only from a geopolitical perspective but also from a business perspective? Business organizations try to make decisions based on predictable patterns, logical assumptions, and rational reasons. Even as they do this, they try to prepare for and think about the 'black swan' events - those massive unforeseen events - to the extent they can. It doesn't always work - something like a global pandemic comes along and throws all the assumptions about volatility and uncertainty out the window.

 

There are real-world implications. Utility companies have had to deal with folks who think that wind turbines cause all kinds of havoc. Chicken feed companies have had to battle a fast-emerging story implanted in social media that chickens are no longer laying eggs due to some nefarious plot. Food companies have had to battle all kinds of crazy stories as to how they are engineering food to control the minds of the populace. Communications companies have been dealing with the insanity of the 5G conspiracy for quite some time. And I won't even touch the medical and healthcare implications of the madness, since I nailed the outcome of that trend back in 2017 in my post on the emerging healthcare reality crisis. Read it - I was dead on with my prediction of what would happen through the pandemic.

 

There are serious implications to the madness. How bad is it? Here's a study to ponder:

 

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There are conspiracy theories online about nearly half of large companies in the Netherlands, BNR reports after searching the brand names of the 25 AEX-listed companies on social media. The broadcaster found conspiracy theories about 12 companies, mostly on Telegram, which has virtually no measures against disinformation.

 

The nature of the conspiracy theories varies wildly. One says that Unilever puts “corpse sludge” in food, though it also claims that McDonald's is part of Unilever. ING allegedly “disappears” savers’ money and facilitates ATM bombings to hasten the transition to digital currency. Another theory states that Albert Heijn organizes “controlled food shortages” by deliberately destroying vegetables. DSM and Akzo both allegedly spread “chemtrails.”

 

According to the broadcaster, someone suggested that Prime Minister Mark Rutte “needs” the Ukraine war to “keep MH17 under wraps.” Another says Shell is keeping the war going to keep energy prices high. There’s also a theory that Shell has secret shale gas contracts for the site of the MH17 disaster.

 

A recurring theme is the World Economic Forum (WEF), an annual meeting of business executives and politicians. One conspiracy theorist noted that WEF-affiliated companies are doing well despite the looming economic recession. “Unilever, Shell, Heineken, and Heinz make billions in profits. All WEF companies. Haven’t we figured it out yet?” Another theory states that ASML cooperates with the WEF’s plan to chip people. And that Philips' dental care subscription model is part of WEF’s plan to end private ownership.

 

Heineken allegedly has satanic references in its logo. KPN makes it impossible to send information about Joe Biden’s son via their internet connections, according to another theory. AEGON allegedly knows the cause behind the excess mortality and uses that knowledge to reinsure life insurance policies. And Signify’s “smart lamposts” spy on the population.

 

Conspiracy theories exist about nearly half of large Dutch companies

21 November 2022, NL Times

 

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What does it lead to? Wild, unpredictable results:

 

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Despite their lack of substantiated evidence and often unfollowable logic, conspiracy theories can still have significant consequences for the people and businesses they touch. The arson attacks on 5G masts in 2020 are an extreme example of this.

 

Last month protesters showed up at Eneco’s head office in Rotterdam to burn their energy bills and shout slogans about “The Great Reset,” the title of a policy proposal by WEF chairman Klaus Schwab. And camera crews showed up at the online supermarket Picnic after a fire at a delivery point prompted a conspiracy theory that it hid a cultured meat factory funded by Bill Gates.

 

Conspiracy theories exist about nearly half of large Dutch companies

21 November 2022, NL Times

 

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What to do about it? That's a bit of a problem since any action can often make it worse.

 

Responding to these theories can often exacerbate the problem, Ronald Kroes, an independent communications manager and interim spokesperson, said to BNR. But there are things companies can do to guard against conspiracy theorists.

 

For example, have a game plan ready for if you get targeted, Kroes said. “Companies practice crisis scenarios all the time: a fire, a cyberattack, a visit from a regulator. Add these kinds of scenarios to it. You don’t know how you’ll be involved in a conspiracy theory. But if you have thought about it and discussed how to deal with it with the management, you are already a lot further along.”

 

Conspiracy theories exist about nearly half of large Dutch companies

21 November 2022, NL Times

 

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The reality today is that every organization must adapt to the madness of the crowds; strategies need to be refined to manage the complexity of the crazy; and leadership must be on guard to work through the insanity. All of it provides for an acceleration of the new era of volatility and is a part of our world in which volatility is the new normal.

 

Original post: jimcarroll.com/2023/08/daily-inspiration-the-volatile-fut...

Sponsored by Porzio Life Sciences, LLC, Porzio, Bromberg & Newman, P.C., and the Seton Hall Law Center for Health & Pharmaceutical Law & Policy. Exploring data in the life sciences industry. Life sciences companies at all stages are increasingly becoming targets for external cyberattacks and data incidents. Industry leaders agree that the risk profile for companies in the life science industry is significant, citing high levels of revenue, significant investments in R&D, a reliance on technology systems and providers, and internal risks as driving factors in the trend. Attendees will hear from industry leaders who will discuss multiple aspects of cybersecurity, data privacy, and global compliance that are unique to life sciences companies.

Briefing for the journalists during the International Transport Forum’s 2025 Summit in Leipzig.

Search the Cyber radar academy. And our academy provides the best online cyber security courses for experts and students. Seeking the skills required to be a cyber security expert with our academy.

For more information visit the website: www.cyberradaracademy.com/online-cyber-security-course-se...

Competitors tackled real-world cybersecurity challenges facing their mini electric grid such as cyberattacks and changing weather.

 

In a room buzzing with anticipation and the hum of computers, a team from University of Central Florida clinched the title at the 2023 CyberForce Competition® held November 4. The event is hosted by the Department of Energy’s (DOE) Office of Cybersecurity, Energy Security and Emergency Response (CESER) and supported by DOE’s Argonne.

 

To find out more, visit this article University of Central Florida team crowned champion at the 2023 CyberForce Competition®

Sponsored by Porzio Life Sciences, LLC, Porzio, Bromberg & Newman, P.C., and the Seton Hall Law Center for Health & Pharmaceutical Law & Policy. Exploring data in the life sciences industry. Life sciences companies at all stages are increasingly becoming targets for external cyberattacks and data incidents. Industry leaders agree that the risk profile for companies in the life science industry is significant, citing high levels of revenue, significant investments in R&D, a reliance on technology systems and providers, and internal risks as driving factors in the trend. Attendees will hear from industry leaders who will discuss multiple aspects of cybersecurity, data privacy, and global compliance that are unique to life sciences companies.

Am 68. Social Media Gipfel zeigten Beatrice Kübli, Projektleiterin bei der Schweizerischen Kriminalprävention (SKP), und Sophus Siegenthaler, Gründer, Managing Partner und IT-Security Engineer bei der Berner cyllective AG, wie Cyberattacken auf Organisationen und Unternehmen ausgeübt werden, welche Vorkehrungen für einen guten Schutz nötig sind und wie Mitarbeitende wirkungsvoll sensibilisiert werden können.

 

Photocredits: Samuel Letsch, s.letsch@outlook.com

Competitors tackled real-world cybersecurity challenges facing their mini electric grid such as cyberattacks and changing weather.

 

In a room buzzing with anticipation and the hum of computers, a team from University of Central Florida clinched the title at the 2023 CyberForce Competition® held November 4. The event is hosted by the Department of Energy’s (DOE) Office of Cybersecurity, Energy Security and Emergency Response (CESER) and supported by DOE’s Argonne.

 

To find out more, visit this article University of Central Florida team crowned champion at the 2023 CyberForce Competition®

Sponsored by Porzio Life Sciences, LLC, Porzio, Bromberg & Newman, P.C., and the Seton Hall Law Center for Health & Pharmaceutical Law & Policy. Exploring data in the life sciences industry. Life sciences companies at all stages are increasingly becoming targets for external cyberattacks and data incidents. Industry leaders agree that the risk profile for companies in the life science industry is significant, citing high levels of revenue, significant investments in R&D, a reliance on technology systems and providers, and internal risks as driving factors in the trend. Attendees will hear from industry leaders who will discuss multiple aspects of cybersecurity, data privacy, and global compliance that are unique to life sciences companies.

Features ITF on “Transport Resilience to Global Shocks” on 21 May 2025 in Leipzig.

Inter-American Defense College Leadership Welcomes representatives from the U.S. Cyber Command (USCYBERCOM) for a speaking engagement at the IADC Campus on Fort Lesley J. McNair, Washington, D.C., Feb. 14, 2023. The distinguished guest spoke about USCYBERCOM and its mission. USCYBERCOM is responsible for protecting the military's information networks from cyberattacks and for conducting offensive cyber operations when directed to do so by the President of the United States or the Secretary of Defense. USCYBERCOM works closely with other U.S. government agencies and international partners to promote cybersecurity and to defend against cyber threats to U.S. national security. (U.S. Air Force photo by Tech. Sgt. Mozer O. Da Cunha)

Sponsored by Porzio Life Sciences, LLC, Porzio, Bromberg & Newman, P.C., and the Seton Hall Law Center for Health & Pharmaceutical Law & Policy. Exploring data in the life sciences industry. Life sciences companies at all stages are increasingly becoming targets for external cyberattacks and data incidents. Industry leaders agree that the risk profile for companies in the life science industry is significant, citing high levels of revenue, significant investments in R&D, a reliance on technology systems and providers, and internal risks as driving factors in the trend. Attendees will hear from industry leaders who will discuss multiple aspects of cybersecurity, data privacy, and global compliance that are unique to life sciences companies.

ITF Secretary-General meets with HE Shaikh Abdulla bin Ahmed Al Khalifa, Minister of Transportation and Telecommunications, Bahrain during the International Transport Forum’s 2025 Summit in Leipzig.

Competitors tackled real-world cybersecurity challenges facing their mini electric grid such as cyberattacks and changing weather.

 

In a room buzzing with anticipation and the hum of computers, a team from University of Central Florida clinched the title at the 2023 CyberForce Competition® held November 4. The event is hosted by the Department of Energy’s (DOE) Office of Cybersecurity, Energy Security and Emergency Response (CESER) and supported by DOE’s Argonne.

 

To find out more, visit this article University of Central Florida team crowned champion at the 2023 CyberForce Competition®

Competitors tackled real-world cybersecurity challenges facing their mini electric grid such as cyberattacks and changing weather.

 

In a room buzzing with anticipation and the hum of computers, a team from University of Central Florida clinched the title at the 2023 CyberForce Competition® held November 4. The event is hosted by the Department of Energy’s (DOE) Office of Cybersecurity, Energy Security and Emergency Response (CESER) and supported by DOE’s Argonne.

 

To find out more, visit this article University of Central Florida team crowned champion at the 2023 CyberForce Competition®

Sponsored by Porzio Life Sciences, LLC, Porzio, Bromberg & Newman, P.C., and the Seton Hall Law Center for Health & Pharmaceutical Law & Policy. Exploring data in the life sciences industry. Life sciences companies at all stages are increasingly becoming targets for external cyberattacks and data incidents. Industry leaders agree that the risk profile for companies in the life science industry is significant, citing high levels of revenue, significant investments in R&D, a reliance on technology systems and providers, and internal risks as driving factors in the trend. Attendees will hear from industry leaders who will discuss multiple aspects of cybersecurity, data privacy, and global compliance that are unique to life sciences companies.

Inter-American Defense College Leadership Welcomes representatives from the U.S. Cyber Command (USCYBERCOM) for a speaking engagement at the IADC Campus on Fort Lesley J. McNair, Washington, D.C., Feb. 14, 2023. The distinguished guest spoke about USCYBERCOM and its mission. USCYBERCOM is responsible for protecting the military's information networks from cyberattacks and for conducting offensive cyber operations when directed to do so by the President of the United States or the Secretary of Defense. USCYBERCOM works closely with other U.S. government agencies and international partners to promote cybersecurity and to defend against cyber threats to U.S. national security. (U.S. Air Force photo by Tech. Sgt. Mozer O. Da Cunha)

Competitors tackled real-world cybersecurity challenges facing their mini electric grid such as cyberattacks and changing weather.

 

In a room buzzing with anticipation and the hum of computers, a team from University of Central Florida clinched the title at the 2023 CyberForce Competition® held November 4. The event is hosted by the Department of Energy’s (DOE) Office of Cybersecurity, Energy Security and Emergency Response (CESER) and supported by DOE’s Argonne.

 

To find out more, visit this article University of Central Florida team crowned champion at the 2023 CyberForce Competition®

Competitors tackled real-world cybersecurity challenges facing their mini electric grid such as cyberattacks and changing weather.

 

In a room buzzing with anticipation and the hum of computers, a team from University of Central Florida clinched the title at the 2023 CyberForce Competition® held November 4. The event is hosted by the Department of Energy’s (DOE) Office of Cybersecurity, Energy Security and Emergency Response (CESER) and supported by DOE’s Argonne.

 

To find out more, visit this article University of Central Florida team crowned champion at the 2023 CyberForce Competition®

Am 68. Social Media Gipfel zeigten Beatrice Kübli, Projektleiterin bei der Schweizerischen Kriminalprävention (SKP), und Sophus Siegenthaler, Gründer, Managing Partner und IT-Security Engineer bei der Berner cyllective AG, wie Cyberattacken auf Organisationen und Unternehmen ausgeübt werden, welche Vorkehrungen für einen guten Schutz nötig sind und wie Mitarbeitende wirkungsvoll sensibilisiert werden können.

 

Photocredits: Samuel Letsch, s.letsch@outlook.com

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