Lancaster to play leading role in UK-India cyber security team
University-based ‘Security Lancaster’ is to be part of a bid to increase UK-India cyber security research collaborations tackling key issues demanding global cooperation.
Associate Director for Business Partnerships and Enterprise for
Security Lancaster, Dr Daniel Prince has returned from a four-day
workshop in India where top researchers from India and the UK came
together to discuss the new collaboration set-up.
The event was
arranged by Research Councils UK (RCUK) Global Uncertainties Programme
and India’s Department of Science and Technology.
The workshop
was jointly organised by RCUK India, the Indraprastha Institute of
Information Technology-Delhi (IIIT-D) and the UK’s Science and
Innovation Network (SIN).
Dr Prince explained the union had
started last year when a small delegation from India attended a
gathering at the Academic Centre of Excellence for Cyber Security
Research in the UK.
This initiated the talks for a broader engagement between the two countries.
“The
UK and India are now working together to foster research networks and
collaborations on cyber security research and commercialization,”
explained Dr Prince. “The workshop in India this year looked at
formalising this bilateral partnership. We are currently in the
exploratory phase of how this will work but it is looking strong.
“From
my point of view the conference was about coming away with some new
research partners and identifying different research objectives for
cyber security research in non-western or European culture.”
The
workshop identified a list of priority grand challenges, including
resilience, identity management, protecting critical national
infrastructure, mobile and cloud security, governance and knowledge
harvesting, which the two nations hope to tackle together.
Dr
Prince will head up the Resilience challenge, a key area of research for
the School of Computing and Communications. This will then feature in
an RCUK report on areas of potential collaboration between the UK and
India.
The event also drilled down into topics such as:
cyber-crime; privacy and security in online social media; human factors
and usable security; and risk identification and monitoring systems and
networks.
“The world’s increased reliance on electronic systems
means that cyber-attacks are likely to have significant damaging
consequences,” added Dr Prince. “The combination of enhanced threats,
increased vulnerabilities and more serious consequences increases the
cyber risk to which we are all exposed.”
Security Lancaster is an
EPSRC-GCHQ Academic Centre of Excellence in Cyber Security. It brings
together Lancaster University’s research in cyber security, security
futures, investigative expertise, violence and society, and transport
and infrastructure protection.
Source: lancs.ac.uk
published: 2013-05-14