Breaking News - Security:
Carnegie Mellon To Create Research Lab W/ Korean Security Agency
Carnegie Mellon University officially signed an agreement Nov. 17 with
high-ranking Korean officials to create a new collaborative research lab for
the study and development of leading-edge security technologies.
Officials from the Korea Information Security Agency (KISA) have pledged $6
million over the next three years to establish CyLab Korea at Carnegie Mellon.
KISA will also establish CyLab Korea in Seoul, Korea, with more than 10
research staff members. Both sites will work together on research projects,
develop new technologies and paradigms that will usher in an era of more
secure computers, networks and communications systems.
The Korea Information Security Agency was established in 1996 to create a safe
and reliable information distribution environment by reacting effectively to a
variety of electronic infringement and intrusions. KISA is a center of
excellence responsible for the computer network security of commercial
information technology infrastructure that covers nearly 90 percent of the
entire infrastructure of information technology in the Republic of Korea
(South Korea).
"This unprecedented international initiative represents the important first
step in CyLab's innovative international strategy," said Pradeep Khosla, dean
of Carnegie Mellon's College of Engineering and founding co-director of CyLab,
a university-wide, multidisciplinary initiative to advance research and
education in trustworthy computing.
"That strategy recognizes the need for international partnerships to
successfully protect our information infrastructure, and the critical physical
infrastructures that depend on it. As global economies become more digital and
global supply chains more integrated our economic interests can be
jeopardized," Khosla said.
"The main thrust of this agreement is to continue to work with our Korean
colleagues to develop a next generation intelligent system that will develop
ways to monitor, detect and prevent the sabotage of data and networks by
viruses, worms and malicious attacks," said Hyong Kim, an electrical and
computer engineering professor at Carnegie Mellon and director of CyLab Korea.
The global business community estimates that network attacks and a flood of
annoying spam accounts for 45 percent of worker downtime and costs companies
more than $150 billion a year.
"This important collaboration with Carnegie Mellon will provide a more secure
digital environment for Korea and increase our capabilities in today's
competitive information technology market," said Hong-Sub Lee, president of
KISA, an agency of Korea's Ministry of Information and Communication (MIC).
Carnegie Mellon Provost Mark Kamlet said the new collaborative agreement
underscores the university's growing leadership in the area of internet
security research.
"We have more than 200 faculty, students and staff from six departments
working at Carnegie Mellon's CyLab to develop and deploy self-healing computer
networks, and create cyber awareness at all levels,'' Kamlet said.
The Korean delegation also will be briefed on a variety of CyLab research
projects ranging from development of a new password identification system to
self-securing devices that erect their own security perimeters and defend
their own critical resources.
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