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Speakers September 9 – 10, 2015

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Speakers  September 9 – 10, 2015

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The EastWest Institute is proudly hosting the 2015 Global Cyberspace Cooperation Summit in New York City.  EWI’s  Global  Cooperation  in  Cyberspace  Initiative  is  convening  policymakers,  business  leaders,  technical  experts  and  civil  society  with  the  objective  to  reduce  conflict,  crime  and  other  disruptions  in  cyberspace  and  promote  stability,  innovation  and  inclusion.    This  invitation-­‐only  meeting  of  international  actors  aims  to  coordinate  and  consolidate  the  initiative’s  progress,  showcase  results  and  promote  collective  action.  The  annual  cyber  summits  provide  a  crucial  forum  for  building  international,  private-­‐public  action  to  foster  international  cooperation  in  cyberspace.  Breakthrough  groups,  aligned  with  the  initiative’s  objectives  of  economic  and  political  development,  digital  security  and  stability,  and  sound  governance  and  management,  carry  the  program  forward.    

   Global Cyberspace Cooperation Summit VI New York 2015  September  9-­‐10,  2015    The  Westin  New  York  at  Times  Square  270  West  43rd  Street    New  York,  NY  10036    

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         Scott  Charney  

  Corporate  Vice  President,  Trustworthy  Computing,  Microsoft    

Scott  Charney  is  Corporate  Vice  President  for  Microsoft’s  Trustworthy  Computing  Group.  This  group  is  responsible  for  the  security  of  Microsoft’s  products  and  services,  as  well  as  a  range  of  corporate  programs  enforcing  Microsoft’s  mandatory  engineering  policies.  Prior  to  joining  Microsoft,  Mr.  Charney  served  as  a  Principal  at  PricewaterhouseCoopers  where  he  led  the  firm’s  Digital  Risk  Management  and  Forensics  Practice.  Before  that,  Mr.  Charney  served  as  Chief  of  the  Computer  Crime  and  Intellectual  Property  Section  (CCIPS)  where  he  was  responsible  for  implementing  the  Justice  Department's  computer  crime  and  intellectual  property  initiatives.  Under  his  direction,  CCIPS  investigated  and  prosecuted  national  and  international  hacker  cases,  economic  espionage  cases,  and  violations  of  the  federal  criminal  copyright  and  trademark  laws.  His  section  also  proposed  and  commented  on  legislation,  represented  the  United  States  internationally,  and  supported  the  development  and  implementation  of  U.S.  information  technology  policy.  Prior  to  leading  CCIPS,  Mr.  Charney  served  as  an  Assistant  United  States  Attorney  responsible  for  the  investigation  and  prosecution  of  complex  cases  involving  organized  crime  and  as  an  Assistant  District  Attorney  in  Bronx  County,  New  York,  where  he  was  responsible  for  prosecuting  persistent  violent  felony  offenders  and  then  served  as  Deputy  Chief  of  the  Investigations  Bureau.      Mr.  Charney  has  received  numerous  awards  during  his  career,  including  the  Justice  Department’s  John  Marshall  Award  for  Outstanding  Legal  Achievement  and  the  Attorney  General's  Award  for  Distinguished  Service.  He  currently  serves  on  the  President’s  National  Security  and  Telecommunications  Advisory  Committee,  was  a  co-­‐chair  of  the  CSIS  Commission  on  Cybersecurity  for  the  44th  Presidency,  and  served  three  years  as  Chair  of  the  G8  Subgroup  on  High-­‐Tech  Crime.    Mr.  Charney  graduated  from  the  Syracuse  University  College  of  Law  with  honors,  and  received  his  undergraduate  degrees  from  the  State  University  of  New  York  at  Binghamton.  

   

Keynote Speakers  

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Fred  Matiang’i  Cabinet  Secretary,  Ministry  of  Information,  Communications  and  Technology  of  Kenya    Dr.  Fred  Matiang’i  is  the  Cabinet  Secretary,  Ministry  of  Information,  Communications  and  Technology  (ICT)  in  the  government  of  Kenya.  Before  his  appointment,  Dr.  Matiang’i  was  the  Regional  Representative  in  East  Africa  for  the  Centre  for  International  Development,  Rockefeller  College  of  Public  Affairs  and  Policy,  the  State  University  of  New  York  (SUNY/CID).  He  formerly  served  as  Chief  of  Party  for  Kenya's  Parliamentary  Strengthening  Program.    Dr.  Matiang’i  held  research  and  program  implementation  positions  in  various  civil  society  organizations  in  Kenya  and  conducted  research  and  training  for  the  Commonwealth  Parliamentary  Association,  the  World  Bank  Institute  and  United  Nations  Development  Programme  (UNDP),  among  others.    He  taught  at  Egerton  University  and  the  University  of  Nairobi.  Dr.  Matiangi’s  education  includes  a  PhD  in  Communication  and  Comparative  Literature  from  the  University  of  Nairobi,  an  MA  in  English  from  the  University  of  Nairobi  and  a  BA  in  Education  degree  from  Kenyatta  University.    

Admiral  (ret.)  William  A.  Owens  Chairman,  Red  Bison  Advisory  Group  LLC;    Chairman,  Board  of  Directors,  CenturyLink;    Member,  Board  of  Directors,  EastWest  Institute    Bill  Owens  is  the  Chairman  of  CenturyLink  Telecom  (3rd  largest  U.S.  telecoms)  and  serves  on  the  board  of  Wipro.  He  is  the  Executive  Chairman  of  Red  Bison  Advisory  Group,  a  company  that  identifies  opportunities  with  proven  enterprises  in  China  and  the  U.S.,  and  creates  dynamic  partnerships.  Owens  is  the  non-­‐executive  chairman  of  private  companies:  Yangtze,  Intelius,  Eastern  Airlines  and  Flow  Mobile.  Recently,  he  was  the  Chairman  of  AEA  Investors  Asia,  a  global  private  equity  firm  located  in  Hong  Kong,  and  Vice  Chairman  of  the  NYSE  for  Asia.  He  has  served  on  over  20  large  public  boards  including  Diamler,  British  American  Tobacco,  Telstra,  Wipro,  Nortel,  and  Polycom.  Owens  was  CEO/Vice  Chairman  of  Nortel  Networks,  taking  the  helm  of  Nortel  following  the  disclosure  of  accounting  issues  in  April  2004.  Under  his  leadership,  Nortel  was  re-­‐established  as  a  stable,  ethical  fortune  500  company.  He  was  also  CEO/Chairman  of  Teledesic  LLC,  a  Bill  Gates/Craig  McCaw  company  

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bringing  worldwide  broadband  through  an  extensive  satellite  network  and  prior,  was  the  President,  COO/Vice  Chairman  of  Science  Applications  International  Corporation.  Owens  was  Vice  Chairman  of  the  Joint  Chiefs  of  Staff,  the  second-­‐ranking  U.S.  military  officer  with  responsibility  for  reorganizing  and  restructuring  the  armed  forces  in  the  post-­‐Cold  War  era.  He  is  a  graduate  of  the  U.S.  Naval  Academy  with  a  bachelor’s  degree  in  mathematics,  bachelor’s  and  master’s  degrees  in  politics,  philosophy  and  economics  from  Oxford  University,  and  a  master’s  degree  in  management  from  George  Washington  University.  Owens  received  many  awards,  namely  the  “Legion  d’Honneur”  by  France,  highest  award  given  to  foreigners  by  the  countries  of  Indonesia  and  Sweden,  George  Washington  University  Distinguished  Graduate,  The  50  Most  Powerful  People  in  Networking  by  Network  World,  one  of  the  100  Best  Board  Members  in  the  U.S.  for  2011  awarded  by  NACD,  and  the  Intrepid  Salute  Award  in  recognition  of  his  business  achievements  and  support  of  important  philanthropic  activities.  Owens  is  a  Roughrider  of  the  state  of  North  Dakota.  Owens  is  active  in  philanthropy  to  foster  Chinese-­‐American  relations  including  dialogues  between  the  most  senior  retired  officers  in  the  U.S.  and  Chinese  militaries  and  similar  dialogues  between  very  senior  economists.    

Qi  Xiangdong  

President,  Qihoo  360  Technology  Co.  Ltd.    Mr.  Xiangdong  Qi  co-­‐founded  Qihoo  360  Technology  Co.  Ltd.  in  2005  and  has  been  its  President  since  2005.  Prior  to  founding  Qihoo  360  Technology,  Mr.  Qi  served  as  a  Vice  President  of  Yahoo!  China  from  January  2004  to  August  2005,  where  he  was  responsible  for  Yahoo!  China's  operations  and  marketing.  From  August  2003  to  January  2004,  he  served  as  the  General  Manager  of  www.3721.com,  responsible  for  its  overall  operations  and  strategic  planning.  He  worked  at  Xinhua  News  Agency  from  1986  to  March  2003.    Mr.  Qi  received  his  bachelor's  degree  in  wireless  communications  from  Changchun  College  of  Posts  and  Telecommunications  in  China  in  1986  and  his  MBA  degree  from  Beijing  University  of  Science  and  Technology  in  China  in  2007.    Qihoo  360  Technology  Co.  Ltd.  is  an  Internet  security  company  known  for  its  free-­‐of-­‐charge  antivirus  software  (360  Safeguard,  360  Mobile  Safe),  Web  Browser  (360  Browsers),  and  Mobile  Application  Store  (360  Mobile  Assistant).  This  freemium  business  model,  “the  360  model,”  is  the  first  of  its  kind  in  the  field  of  Internet  security  and  has  fundamentally  changed  the  market  structure.  Qihoo  360  Technology  Co.  Ltd.  is  now  a  top  three  Internet  company  as  measured  by  user  base  in  China.  

   

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Suzanne  E.  Spaulding  

Under  Secretary,  National  Protection  and  Programs  Directorate,  U.S.  Department  of  Homeland  Security    Suzanne  E.  Spaulding  serves  as  Under  Secretary  for  the  National  Protection  and  Programs  Directorate  at  the  Department  of  Homeland  Security.  Ms.  Spaulding  has  spent  nearly  25  years  working  on  national  security  issues  for  both  Republican  and  Democratic  Administrations  and  on  both  sides  of  the  aisle  in  Congress.  She  held  leadership  positions  in  the  House  and  Senate  intelligence  committees  and  spent  six  years  at  the  Central  Intelligence  Agency.  As  an  attorney  in  private  practice,  she  also  served  as  Security  Counsel  for  the  Business  Roundtable  and  worked  with  trade  associations  and  other  critical  infrastructure  companies  on  security  related  issues.    Ms.  Spaulding  earned  both  her  law  degree  and  undergraduate  degree  at  the  University  of  Virginia.    

Zhao  Zeliang  

Director-­‐General,  Cyber  Security  Coordination  Department,  Cyberspace  Administration  of  China    Mr.  Zhao  Zeliang  is  the  Director-­‐General  of  Cyber  Security  Coordination  Department  at  CAC  (Cyberspace  Administration  of  China).  He  is  also  the  executive  vice-­‐director  of  the  National  Standardization  Technical  Committee  on  Information  Security  and  director  of  Information  Security  Teaching  Steering  Committee  under  the  Ministry  of  Education.    Before  CAC,  he  worked  as  the  Director-­‐General  of  Information  Security  Coordination  Department  at  MIIT  (Ministry  of  Industry  and  Information  Technology  of  the  People's  Republic  of  China)  and  vice  director  of  Information  Security  Coordination  Department  at  the  State  Council  Informatization  Office.  

   

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         Robert  Anderson  Jr.  Executive  Assistant  Director,  Criminal,  Cyber,  Response  and  Services  Branch,  Federal  Bureau  of  Investigation  (FBI)    Robert  Anderson  Jr.  was  appointed  Executive  Assistant  Director  (EAD)  of  the  Criminal,  Cyber,  Response  and  Services  Branch  in  March  2014.  In  this  position,  he  oversees  all  FBI  criminal  and  cyber  investigations  worldwide,  international  operations,  critical  incident  response,  and  victim  assistance.      Mr.  Anderson  most  recently  served  as  Assistant  Director  of  the  Counterintelligence  Division  beginning  in  August  2012;  prior  to  that,  he  was  the  division’s  Deputy  Assistant  Director  for  operations.      Mr.  Anderson  joined  the  FBI  in  1995  and  reported  to  the  Washington  Field  Office  (WFO),  where  he  worked  narcotics  and  violent  crime  cases.  He  then  served  on  the  Hostage  Rescue  Team  and  completed  deployments  to  more  than  20  countries  and  war  zones.      After  becoming  a  supervisor  in  the  Counterintelligence  Division  in  2001,  Mr.  Anderson  coordinated  several  major  People’s  Republic  of  China  espionage  cases  involving  the  Department  of  Energy’s  (DOE)  nuclear  weapons  laboratories,  including  the  investigation  of  Los  Alamos  National  Laboratory  scientist  Wen  Ho  Lee.  Mr.  Anderson  also  managed  the  program  that  placed  FBI  Special  Agents  in  DOE  labs.      As  Unit  Chief,  he  oversaw  the  management  of  nuclear  proliferation  and  espionage  cases,  including  the  investigation  of  export  broker  Philip  Cheng.  This  investigation  led  to  multiple  cases  being  opened  and  the  arrests  of  16  people  for  dual-­‐use  technology  transfers.      Mr.  Anderson  returned  to  WFO  in  2004,  first  as  supervisor  of  its  global  foreign  counterintelligence  squad  and  later  as  supervisor  of  one  of  its  espionage  squads.  In  2007,  Mr.  Anderson  was  promoted  to  Assistant  Special  Agent  in  Charge  of  the  Counterespionage  Branch  at  WFO.  In  this  role,  he  oversaw  the  indictment  and  arrest  of  multiple  defendants  for  espionage  and  related  offenses,  including  an  investigation  that  resulted  in  one  of  the  first  arrests,  prosecutions,  and  incarcerations  of  a  U.S.  citizen  committing  espionage  on  behalf  of  China.      Mr.  Anderson  returned  to  Headquarters  in  2008  to  serve  as  Chief  of  the  Counterespionage  Section.  During  the  next  year,  he  led  the  investigation  into  espionage  by  former  CIA  agent  Harold  James  Nicholson  and  his  son,  Nathan,  which  resulted  in  Nicholson’s  re-­‐arrest  and  prosecution  of  both  father  and  son  for  espionage.  Mr.  Anderson  was  also  detailed  for  three  months  in  2009  as  the  Acting  Special  Agent  in  Charge  of  the  Albuquerque  Division.    

Speakers  

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In  May  2010,  Mr.  Anderson  was  appointed  Special  Agent  in  Charge  of  the  Intelligence  Division  at  WFO,  where  he  led  the  collection,  coordination,  and  production  and  dissemination  of  intelligence  information  from  WFO  to  the  rest  of  the  FBI  and  its  U.S.  Intelligence  Community  partners.      Before  joining  the  FBI,  Mr.  Anderson  was  a  Delaware  State  Trooper  for  nearly  nine  years.  He  served  in  the  uniform  patrol  division,  the  criminal  investigative  unit,  and  the  aviation  section.  Mr.  Anderson,  who  is  a  pilot  and  a  paramedic,  was  named  the  Delaware  State  Police  Trooper  of  the  Year  in  1990—the  force’s  highest  honor—for  attempting  to  rescue  individuals  who  were  trapped  in  a  burning  home  in  1989.  

     

    Greg  Austin  Professorial  Fellow,  EastWest  Institute    Dr.  Greg  Austin  is  the  author  of  Cyber  Policy  in  China  (Polity,  2014)  and  a  recent  article,  “Managing  Asymmetries  in  Chinese  and  American  Cyber  Power”  (Georgetown  Journal  of  International  Affairs,  October  2014).  He  has  published  several  books  on  China’s  strategic  policy  and  one  book  on  the  Russian  armed  forces.  He  is  a  Professorial  Fellow  with  the  EastWest  Institute  (New  York/Brussels/Moscow),  and  has  held  posts  in  defense  intelligence,  diplomacy,  academia  and  NGOs.  He  wrote  Cyber  Policy  in  China  while  holding  a  Visiting  Senior  Fellowship  with  the  Department  of  War  Studies  at  King’s  College  London.    

Kamlesh  Bajaj  Distinguished  Fellow,  EastWest  Institute    Dr.  Kamlesh  Bajaj  was  the  Founder  CEO,  Data  Security  Council  of  India  (DSCI).  He  was  also  the  Founder  Director  of  the  Indian  Computer  Emergency  Response  Team  (CERT-­‐In).  His  career  in  ICT  of  nearly  40  years  includes  several  positions  and  different  roles:  Global  Head,  Information  Risk  Management  Consulting  Practice,  Tata  Consultancy  Services;  Dy  CCA,  Department  of  Electronics  and  IT  for  establishing  techno-­‐legal  framework  for  public  key  infrastructure.  Presently,  he  is  Mentor  Professor  of  Cyber  Security  at  NIIT  University,  India.    Bajaj  established  DSCI  as  the  lead  agency  in  data  security,  privacy  protection,  and  cybersecurity,  with  its  footprint  in  India  and  abroad.  He  led  the  development  of  best  practices  in  security  and  privacy;  authored  several  important  policy  papers  on  security,  privacy  protection,  cybersecurity,  Internet  governance,  cyberspace  as  global  commons,  cyber  crimes  and  international  treaties.  He  writes  in  the  national  media  on  these  matters.    

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As  a  member  of  several  government  committees  on  cybersecurity,  Internet  governance,  privacy  law,  security  education,  and  cyber  forensics  he  has  contributed  to  the  making  of  policies.  He  was  a  member  of  the  committee  that  drafted  the  Privacy  Bill.      Bajaj  holds  a  Ph.D.  in  Physics  from  McMaster  University,  Canada  in  1976,  and  a  Master’s  degree  in  Physics  from  the  University  of  Delhi  in  1971.  He  is  a  Fellow  at  the  National  Academy  of  Sciences,  and  a  Fellow  at  the  Institution  of  Electronics  and  Telecommunication  Engineers.      He  has  actively  contributed  to  all  EWI  conferences  on  global  cooperation  in  cyberspace,  since  2010.  His  areas  of  interest  include  Internet  governance,  privacy  and  surveillance,  and  law  enforcement  in  cyberspace.      

Allan  S.  Cabanlong  Chief,  Web  Services  and  Cyber  Security  Division,    Philippine  National  Police    Allan  S.  Cabanlong  is  Police  Chief  Inspector  and  Chief,  Web  Services  and  Cyber  Security  Division  of  the  Philippine  National  Police  —  Information  Technology  Management  Service.  He  is  an  ASEAN  Engineer,  a  professional  electronic  engineer  and  a  graduate  of  Master  of  Science  in  Global  Information  and  Telecommunications  Studies  at  Waseda  University  in  Tokyo,  Japan.    He  was  a  member  of  the  Technical  Working  Group  in  the  drafting  of  the  Cybercrime  Prevention  Act  of  2012  (RA10175)  of  the  Republic  of  the  Philippines  with  the  Office  of  the  Honorable  Senator  Edgardo  J.  Angara.  He  is  also  one  of  the  four  core  group  members  in  the  drafting  of  the  proposed  Use  of  Internet  for  Terrorist  Purposes  Bill  of  the  Republic  of  the  Philippines  with  the  Office  of  the  President  (Anti-­‐Terrorism  Council)  and  United  Nations  Office  on  Drugs  and  Crime  (UNODC),  and  an  architect  of  the  Administrative  Order  39  signed  by  the  President  of  the  Philippines  in  2013.    He  is  a  contributor  to  the  2012  book  Law,  Policy  and  Technology:  Cyber  Terrorism,  Information  Warfare  and  Internet  Immobilization  (edited  by  Pauline  Reich  and  Eduardo  Gelbstein).    He  is  a  recipient  of  various  local  and  international  awards  in  the  fields  of  electronics  engineering,  information  and  communications  technology,  law  enforcement  and  cybersecurity.  He  is  an  Honoree  of  the  2015  Asia-­‐Pacific  Information  Security  Leadership  Achievements  (ISLA)  Awards  awarded  by  (ISC)2,  listed  as  one  of  the  Ten  Outstanding  Electronics  Engineers  of  the  Philippines  in  2014,  the  Philippine  National  Police  Commissioned  Officer  of  the  Year  2012  and  2014  and  recipient  of  the  2015  Special  Citation  for  Outstanding  Professional  of  the  Philippines.    

   

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Robert  N.  Campbell  Founder  and  CEO,  Campbell  Global  Services;    Member,  Board  of  Directors,  EastWest  Institute      Bob  has  spent  40  years  working  with  corporate  and  government  clients  on  challenging  management,  operational  and  financial  management  issues.  Prior  to  his  retirement,  Bob  led  the  U.S.  Public  Sector  practice  at  Deloitte  &  Touche  LLC  and  served  as  a  Vice  Chairman  of  that  firm.  He  is  on  the  board  of  the  Executive  Committee  of  the  EastWest  Institute,  Aspen  Group  and  Austin  Council  of  Foreign  Affairs  and  is  the  Chairman  of  the  Advisory  Council  of  the  Lyndon  B.  Johnson  School  of  Public  Affairs.    Bob  also  serves  on  corporate  boards  including  Bunker  Energy  Partners  LLC,  Access  Health  Care,  the  Britton  Hill  Investment  Partners  Advisory  Board  and  Talent  Guard  Advisory  Board.    He  has  authored  several  books  and  articles  on  public  policy  and  management  issues  and  served  on  the  Bipartisan  Policy  Center  Task  Force  on  the  Federal  Deficit.  In  2013,  Bob  was  chosen  for  the  Lyndon  B.  Johnson  School  of  Public  Affairs  Distinguished  Public  Service  Award  and  spoke  at  the  Headliners  Club  Distinguished  Austinites  Speakers  Series.    

Astrid  Stuth  Cevallos  Research  Assistant,  RAND  Corporation    Currently  based  in  the  D.C.  area,  Ms.  Astrid  Stuth  Cevallos  is  a  Research  Assistant  at  the  RAND  Corporation,  where  she  works  on  projects  related  to  international  security  and  China’s  foreign  policy.  She  has  researched  Chinese  perspectives  on  behavior  in  cyberspace  and  is  interested  in  global  governance  issues,  including  the  need  for  norms  governing  cyberspace  and  the  pivotal  role  of  the  U.S.-­‐China  relationship  in  shaping  those  norms.      A  native  of  Milwaukee,  Wisconsin,  Cevallos  received  her  AB  in  East  Asian  Studies  magna  cum  laude  from  Princeton  University  and  earned  an  MPhil  in  International  Relations  from  the  University  of  Oxford,  where  she  studied  as  a  Rhodes  Scholar.  She  first  developed  an  interest  in  Chinese  culture,  language,  and  politics  while  living  and  studying  at  Li  Po  Chun  United  World  College  in  Hong  Kong;  later,  she  lived  in  Beijing,  where  she  honed  her  Chinese  skills  as  a  Boren  Scholar  at  the  Inter-­‐University  Program  for  Chinese  Language  Studies  and  interned  at  the  Carnegie-­‐Tsinghua  Center  for  Global  Policy.  

   

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Bertrand  de  La  Chapelle  Director,  Internet  &  Jurisdiction  Project    Since  2012,  the  Internet  &  Jurisdiction  Project  facilitates  a  multi-­‐stakeholder  dialogue  process  to  address  the  tensions  between  the  cross-­‐border  Internet  and  national  jurisdictions.  Its  first  objective  is  to  develop  and  implement  a  transnational  due  process  framework  for  the  submission  and  handling  of  requests  regarding  domain  seizures,  content  takedowns  and  user  identification.      Bertrand  was  previously  a  Director  on  the  Board  of  ICANN  (2010  -­‐  2013)  and  France's  Thematic  Ambassador  and  Special  Envoy  for  the  Information  Society  (2006  -­‐  2010),  covering  all  Internet  governance  processes,  including  as  vice-­‐chair  of  ICANN's  Governmental  Advisory  Committee  (GAC)  and  member  of  the  Multi-­‐Stakeholder  Advisory  Group  (MAG)  of  the  Internet  Governance  Forum  (IGF),  a  process  he  has  engaged  in  since  its  creation  in  2006.  Bertrand  actively  participated  in  the  World  Summit  on  the  Information  Society  (WSIS)  process  between  2002  and  2005  to  promote  dialogue  among  civil  society,  the  private  sector  and  governmental  representatives,  including  as  Director  of  the  collaborative  platform  WSIS-­‐online.    An  active  promoter  and  implementer  of  multi-­‐stakeholder  governance  for  more  than  15  years,  he  builds  upon  his  experience  as  a  diplomat,  a  civil  society  actor  and  also  a  tech  entrepreneur.  He  was,  in  particular,  the  co-­‐founder  and  president  of  Virtools  (1994  -­‐  1998),  a  pioneer  provider  of  virtual  reality  development  environment,  acquired  in  2005  by  CAD  leader  Dassault  Systèmes.      Bertrand  is  a  graduate  of  Ecole  Polytechnique  (1978),  Institut  d'Etudes  Politiques  de  Paris  (1983)  and  Ecole  Nationale  d'Administration  (1986).    

Dr.  Chris  C.  Demchak  

RADM  Grace  M.  Hopper  Professor  of  Cyber  Security,    U.S.  Naval  War  College      With  engineering,  economics,  and  comparative  complex  organization  theory/political  science  degrees,  Dr.  Chris  C.  Demchak  is  the  RADM  Grace  M.  Hopper  Professor  of  Cyber  Security  and  Director,  Center  for  Cyber  Conflict  Studies  (C3S),  U.S.  Naval  War  College.  In  her  research  on  cyberspace  as  a  globally  shared  insecure  complex  ‘substrate’,  Demchak  takes  a  systemic  approach  to  emergent  structures,  comparative  institutional  evolution,  adversaries’  use  of  systemic  cybered  tools,  virtual  worlds/gaming  for  operationalized  organizational  learning,  and  designing  systemic  resilience  against  imposed  surprise.  Recent  works  include  Designing  Resilience  (2010,  co-­‐edited);  Wars  of  Disruption  and  Resilience  (2011);  and  a  draft  manuscript  entitled  Cyber  Westphalia:  Redrawing  International  Economics,  Conflict,  and  Global  Structure.  

   

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  Oleg  Demidov     Consultant,  PIR  Center  

 Oleg  Demidov  is  a  consultant  at  PIR  Center—a  leading  Russian  non-­‐governmental  think-­‐tank  conducting  research  in  the  field  of  international  security.  Previously,  since  2011,  he  worked  at  PIR  Center  on  launching,  developing  and  expanding  the  Program  “Global  Internet  Governance  and  International  Information  Security.”    Starting  in  2012—Demidov  served  as  an  expert  to  the  Commission  on  Information  Security  and  Cybercrime  at  the  Russian  Association  for  Electronic  Communications  (RAEC).  From  March  2014,  he  was  a  member  of  the  Research  Advisory  Network  (RAN)  under  the  Global  Commission  on  Internet  Governance  (CGIG).  In  2011-­‐2014,  he  conducted  research  for  the  international  project  “A  Twenty-­‐First  Century  Concert  of  Powers”  run  by  Frankfurt  Peace  Research  Institute  (HSFK).    In  addition,  Demidov  is  an  author  and  co-­‐author  of  a  monograph,  reports  and  research  articles  on  information  security,  cybersecurity,  and  global  Internet  governance  in  PIR  Center’s  Security  Index  journal  and  other  editions.  He  is  a  participant  and  speaker  at  major  conferences  and  summits  on  cyber  governance  and  global  Internet  governance  in  Russia  and  abroad  (ICANN  Meetings,  NETmundial,  Internet  Governance  Forum  (IGF),  EuroDIG,  CSCAP  Working  Group  on  Cybersecurity,  CyFy,  RIF+KIB,  RAEC  Cybersecurity  Forum,  Russian  Internet  Governance  Forum,  Ruscrypto,  etc.).  

 

Frédérick  Douzet  Professor,  French  Institute  of  Geopolitics,  University  of  Paris  8;  Chairwoman,  Castex  Chair  of  Cyberstrategy    Frédérick  Douzet  is  Professor  at  the  French  Institute  of  Geopolitics  of  the  University  of  Paris  8  and  Castex  Chair  of  Cyberstrategy  (www.cyberstrategie.org).    Her  current  research  interests  deal  with  the  geopolitics  of  cyberspace,  a  topic  she  has  been  interested  in  since  the  early  1990s.  She  manages  a  team  of  graduate  students  on  these  issues  at  the  University  of  Paris  8  and  the  Castex  Chair  of  Cyberstrategy.  She  is  a  member  of  the  editorial  boards  of  the  reviews  Hérodote  and  Sécurité  et  Stratégies.  She  studied  political  science  at  the  Institute  of  Political  Studies  of  Grenoble  and  Oxford  Brookes  University.  She  earned  a  MA  degree  from  the  Graduate  School  of  Journalism  at  

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UC  Berkeley  in  1993  then  joined  the  graduate  school  of  geopolitics  at  the  University  of  Paris  8  where  she  did  her  PhD  under  the  supervision  of  Béatrice  Giblin.    Frédérick  Douzet  has  received  several  awards  for  her  research:  International  Forum  on  Cybersecurity  (FIC)  Book  Prize  for  strategic  thinking  (2015);  France-­‐Berkeley  Fund  Award  for  Outstanding  Young  Scholar  (2014);  Alphonse  Milne  Edwards  book  prize  from  the  Society  of  Geography  (2008);  Ernest  Lemonon  book  prize  from  the  Academy  of  Moral  and  Political  Sciences  (2008);  and  Best  Paper  Award  from  the  Urban  Affairs  Association  (2009).  She  has  received  scholarships  from  the  Fulbright  Program  and  the  Georges  Lurcy  Foundation.  She  was  nominated  junior  member  of  the  Institut  Universitaire  de  France  in  2006.      

Sorin  Ducaru  

Assistant  Secretary  General,  Emerging  Security  Challenges,  NATO    Ambassador  Sorin  Ducaru  took  over  the  post  of  Assistant  Secretary  General  for  Emerging  Security  Challenges  in  September  2013.  He  is  responsible  for  providing  support  to  the  North-­‐Atlantic  Council  and  for  advising  the  Secretary  General  on  the  evolution  of  emerging  security  challenges  and  their  potential  impact  on  NATO’s  security.    Prior  to  his  appointment  as  ASG,  Ambassador  Ducaru  served  as  Romania’s  Permanent  Representative  to  the  North  Atlantic  Council,  from  September  2006  to  September  2013.  From  November  2011,  Ambassador  Ducaru  was  the  Dean  of  the  North  Atlantic  Council.  Ambassador  Ducaru  was  born  on  22  June  1964  in  Baia-­‐Mare,  Romania.  He  graduated  from  the  Polytechnic  Institute  of  Bucharest  in  1988  and  the  Romanian  National  School  of  Political  Studies  and  Public  Administration  in  1992.  He  holds  a  MPhil  degree  in  International  Relations  from  the  University  of  Amsterdam  (1993)  and  a  PhD  degree  in  International  Economics  from  the  Academy  of  Economic  Studies  in  Bucharest  (2005).    He  joined  the  Romanian  Ministry  of  Foreign  Affairs  in  1993,  assuming  various  posts  such  as  member  of  the  Policy  Planning  team,  counsellor  to  the  Minister,  spokesman  of  the  MFA  and  Director  for  NATO  and  Strategic  Issues.  From  2001  to  2006,  he  served  as  Romania’s  Ambassador  to  the  United  States.  In  2000–2001,  Ambassador  Ducaru  served  as  Permanent  Representative  of  Romania  to  the  United  Nations,  in  New  York.    In  2000,  Ambassador  Ducaru  was  awarded  by  the  President  of  Romania  the  National  Order  of  “Faithful  Service”  in  rank  of  Commander,  followed  by,  in  2006,  the  Order  for  “Diplomatic  Merit”  and  in  2008  the  rank  of  Knight  of  the  National  Order  “The  Star  of  Romania”.  He  received  the  title  of  “Ambassador  of  the  Year”  in  2003  and  2012  from  the  Minister  of  Foreign  Affairs  of  Romania.    He  is  married  to  Carmen  Ducaru  (a  graduate  of  the  Bucharest  Academy  of  Economic  Studies  and  of  the  National  School  of  Political  Studies  and  Public  Administration)  and  has  two  children:  Maria-­‐Teodora  and  Matei-­‐Nicolae.  Ambassador  Ducaru  speaks  German,  English  and  French,  and  enjoys  playing  the  guitar,  skiing,  tennis,  photography  and  cinema.  

   

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    Jon  Eisenberg  Director,  Computer  Science  and  Telecommunications  Board  National  Academies  of  Sciences,  Engineering,  and  Medicine    Jon  Eisenberg  directs  the  Computer  Science  and  Telecommunications  Board  of  the  National  Academies  of  Sciences,  Engineering,  and  Medicine,  where  he  manages  a  broad  portfolio  of  studies  and  convening  activities  on  information  technology,  future  research  directions,  and  policy  implications.  Specific  study  topics  have  included  cybersecurity,  Internet  and  broadband  policy,  supercomputing,  digital  archiving,  and  networking  and  communications  technologies.  In  1995-­‐1997  he  was  a  AAAS  Science,  Engineering,  and  Diplomacy  Fellow  at  the  U.S.  Agency  for  International  Development,  where  he  worked  on  technology  transfer  and  information  and  telecommunications  policy  issues.  Dr.  Eisenberg  received  his  Ph.D.  in  Physics  from  the  University  of  Washington  in  1996  and  B.S.  in  Physics  with  honors  from  the  University  of  Massachusetts  at  Amherst  in  1988.    

Thomas  Fitschen  Director  for  the  United  Nations,  International  Cyber  Policy  and  Counter-­‐Terrorism,  Federal  Foreign  Office  of  Germany    Ambassador  Dr.  Thomas  Fitschen  is  the  Director  for  the  United  Nations,  for  international  cooperation  against  terrorism  and  for  cyber  foreign  policy  at  the  Federal  Foreign  Office  (since  August  2015).  Before  coming  back  to  Berlin  he  was  Ambassador  and  Deputy  Permanent  Representative  of  the  Federal  Republic  of  Germany  to  the  Office  of  the  United  Nations  and  the  other  International  Organizations  in  Geneva  (2012  -­‐  2015).  From  October  2011  to  July  2012  Dr.  Fitschen  was  Faculty  Member  of  the  Geneva  Center  for  Security  Policy.  He  is  a  lawyer  by  training  (University  of  Kiel,  Germany,  2nd  State  Exam  1989)  and  holds  a  doctorate  in  international  law  from  the  University  of  Saarbrücken.  Dr.  Fitschen  joined  the  Federal  Foreign  Office  in  1990.    Earlier  posts  include:    -­‐   Head  of  the  General  Assembly  Affairs  Division  (political  and  social  issues)  and  Deputy  Head  of  the  Ministry's  Task  Force  Rule  of  Law  Promotion  in  Berlin  (2008  -­‐  2011);    -­‐   Deputy  Head  of  the  Political  Section  and  Legal  Adviser  to  the  German  UN  Mission  in  New  York  and  delegate  in  the  General  Assembly's  6th  (Legal)  Committee  (2005  –  2008,  including  during  the  German  EU  Presidency  in  2007);    -­‐   Deputy  Head  of  the  Task  Force  Global  Issues  at  Headquarters  (2001  –  2005);    

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-­‐   Desk  officer  at  the  Division  for  International  Cooperation  against  Organized  Crime  and  Terrorism  (1999  –  2001);  -­‐   Head  of  the  legal  and  consular  section  and  political  officer  of  the  German  Embassy  in  Manila,  Phillippines,  and  Consul  for  Palau,  the  Federated  States  of  Micronesia  and  the  Marshall  Islands  (1996  –  1999);    -­‐   Desk  officer  for  social  affairs  and  human  rights  issues  at  the  German  UN  Mission  in  New  York  and  Germany's  delegate  in  the  Third  Committee  of  the  General  Assembly  (1993  –  1996);    -­‐   Desk  officer  at  the  Division  for  Public  International  Law  of  the  Foreign  Office  in  Bonn,  covering  issues  such  as  the  law  of  state  succession,  the  peaceful  settlement  of  disputes  and  the  work  of  the  International  Law  Commission  (1991  -­‐  1993).      Dr.  Fitschen  is  a  member  of  the  German  Society  of  International  Law  (DGIR),  the  European  Society  of  International  Law  (ESIL)  and  the  German  United  Nations  Association  (DGVN).    He  publishes  regularly  on  issues  of  international  law,  the  United  Nations  and  cultural  heritage  law.    

Nathalia  Foditsch  Researcher,  Center  for  Technology  and  Society,    Fundação  Getúlio  Vargas    Nathalia  Foditsch  strongly  believes  technology  is  driving  us  towards  a  more  inclusive  society.  She  is  a  licensed  Brazilian  attorney  focused  on  communications  policy  and  regulation.  She  has  worked  for  the  Center  of  Technology  and  Society  at  Getulio  Vargas  Foundation,  for  the  Communications  and  Society  Programa  at  the  Aspen  Institute  and  for  the  Broadband  Special  Programme  at  the  Inter-­‐American  Development  Bank.      Her  interest  in  communications  policy  and  regulation  started  when  she  worked  for  the  Brazilian  Antitrust  Authority  (CADE).  Foditsch  holds  a  Master’s  in  Law  and  a  Master’s  in  Public  Policy,  and  is  currently  co-­‐presenter  for  the  course  “Comparative  U.S.  Brazil  Legal  and  Judicial  Systems”  at  the  Washington  College  of  Law  (WCL),  American  University.  She  is  currently  a  PhD  student  in  Communications  at  American  University,  supported  by  the  Google  Research  Award  and  advised  by  Professor  Laura  DeNardis.  

 

Karsten  Geier  Head,  Cyber  Policy  Coordination  Staff,    Federal  Foreign  Office  of  Germany    Karsten  Geier  is  head  of  the  Cyber  Policy  Coordination  Staff  in  Germany’s  Federal  Foreign  Office.  A  career  Foreign  Service  officer,  Karsten  has  held  a  variety  of  posts  both  at  home  and  abroad.  He  has  served  in  South-­‐Eastern  Europe,  Brussels  (at  Germany’s  Representation  to  the  European  Union)  and  Washington,  D.C.  (including  as  exchange  officer  in  the  U.S.  Department  of  State).  His  most  recent  assignment  abroad  led  him  to  New  York,  where  he  helped  set  up  the  European  Union  Delegation,  and  subsequently  worked  for  Germany’s  Mission  to  the  United  Nations.      

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Karsten  was  Germany’s  member  of  the  2014/2015  UN  Group  of  Governmental  Experts  on  Developments  in  the  Field  of  Information  and  Telecommunications  in  the  Context  of  International  Security.    

 

Gib  Godwin  

Senior  Fellow,  EastWest  Institute;    Managing  Director,  PricewaterhouseCoopers  Public  Sector    Rear  Admiral  (retired)  James  Basil  Godwin  III  transitioned  from  the  United  States  Navy  in  2006  after  33  years  of  service,  which  included  extensive  experience  in  critical  program  and  fiscal  management,  systems  integration,  problem  solving  and  successful  program  delivery  in  the  defense  domain.  Rear  Admiral  Godwin  is  a  decorated  Naval  Aviator  with  fleet  assignments  in  both  the  A-­‐7  Corsair  II  and  the  F/A-­‐18  Hornet  with  more  than  4500  flight  hours  embarked  in  numerous  Carrier  Air  Wings  and  Carrier  Strike  Groups.  He  joined  PricewaterhouseCoopers  in  October  2014.    He  served  as  the  Senior  Vice  President  for  Naval  and  Maritime  programs  with  Burdeshaw  Associates  in  Bethesda,  Maryland  from  April  to  October  2014.    He  is  Founder  and  President  of  BriteWerx,  Inc.,  a  Service  Disabled  Veteran  Owned  Small  Business  (SDVOSB)  providing  consulting  services  in  the  aerospace,  information  technology,  cyber  and  disruptive  technology  development  fields.    From  2006  to  2012,  he  held  vice  president  positions  within  the  defense  industry,  including  Athena  Technologies  (now  Rockwell  Collins),  Dynamic  Analytics  &  Test  and  Northrop  Grumman  Information  Systems.  During  this  time  he  was  the  cybersecurity  lead  for  the  Defense  Systems  and  Defense  Technology  Divisions  within  the  Northrop  Grumman  Information  Systems  Sector.    From  2004-­‐2006,  Rear  Admiral  Godwin  served  as  the  Direct  Reporting  Program  Manager,  Navy  Marine  Corps  Intranet  (NMCI)  and  then  as  the  first  Program  Executive  Officer,  Enterprise  Information  Systems  (PEO(EIS)).  In  this  capacity,  he  managed  the  largest  IT  services  contract  in  the  world  with  expenditures  exceeding  $1.4  billion  per  year    

   

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Davis  Hake  Director  of  Cybersecurity  Strategy,  Palo  Alto  Networks    In  his  role  as  Director  of  Cybersecurity  Strategy,  Davis  is  responsible  for  building  and  sharing  the  company’s  strategy  for  cybersecurity  thought  leadership  and  delivering  valuable  information,  insights,  and  instructional  tools  on  all  things  related  to  cyber  threats  and  today’s  security  landscape.          Prior  to  joining  the  Palo  Alto  Networks  team  in  2015,  Davis  Hake  was  a  leader  in  U.S.  government  cybersecurity.    He  served  on  the  National  Security  Staff  in  the  White  House,  at  senior  levels  in  the  Department  of  Homeland  Security,  and  as  a  policy  expert  for  Members  of  Congress.      At  the  White  House,  Davis  coordinated  response  efforts  for  cybersecurity  incidents  across  .Gov  and  developed  strategies  for  strengthening  federal  networks’  resilience.  He  also  served  as  the  principal  advisor  for  the  Deputy  Undersecretary  for  Cybersecurity  and  Communications  at  the  Department  of  Homeland  Security,  where  he  managed  a  multitude  of  federal  programs,  industry  partnership  and  strategic  communications  efforts  critical  to  national  security.      Before  joining  the  Administration,  Davis  was  a  leader  in  cybersecurity  issues  on  Capitol  Hill.  Working  for  Congressman  James  Langevin  from  Rhode  Island,  he  ran  the  Congressional  Cybersecurity  Caucus  to  better  educate  policy  makers  about  issues  such  as  public-­‐private  partnerships,  cyber  defense,  and  digital  privacy.  Davis  also  drafted  some  of  the  first  comprehensive  cybersecurity  legislation,  for  which  he  received  a  Federal  100  Award  for  leadership  in  the  IT  community.      He  is  a  graduate  of  the  University  of  California  –  Davis,  where  he  studied  international  relations  and  economics,  and  received  a  Masters  in  strategic  security  studies  from  the  National  Defense  University.      

Royal  I.  Hansen     Managing  Director,  Technology  Risk,  Goldman  Sachs    

Royal  is  the  head  of  Global  Advisory  in  Technology  Risk,  including  Application  Risk,  Data  Risk  and  Business  Continuity  Planning.  He  serves  as  chair  of  the  External  Digital  Activities  and  User  Development  Applications  Committees  and  is  also  a  member  of  the  Global  Business  Resilience  and  Technology  Division  Risk  Operating  Committees.  Royal  first  joined  Goldman  Sachs  in  2006  as  a  vice  president  and  rejoined  the  firm  as  a  managing  director  in  2011.  Prior  to  rejoining  the  firm,  Royal  managed  application  security,  enterprise  IT  risk,  and  disaster  recovery  at  both  Fidelity  and  Morgan  Stanley.  He  began  his  career  as  a  software  developer  for  Sapient  before  building  a  cyber-­‐security  practice  in  the  financial  services  industry  at  @stake,  which  was  acquired  by  Symantec.  Royal  earned  a  BA  in  Computer  Science  from  Yale  University.  He  was  awarded  a  Fulbright  Fellowship  in  information  sciences  and  Arabic  language  study,  which  he  completed  at  the  United  Arab  Emirates  University.    

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Udo  Helmbrecht  Executive  Director,  European  Agency  for  Network  and  Information  Security  (ENISA)    Born  in  Castrop-­‐Rauxel  in  1955,  Udo  Helmbrecht  completed  high  school  in  1974.  He  then  served  for  two  years  in  the  German  Federal  Armed  Forces.  From  1976  to  1981,  Helmbrecht  studied  physics,  mathematics  and  computer  science  at  the  Ruhr  University  in  Bochum.  Having  received  his  diploma  in  physics,  he  then  went  on  to  obtain  a  doctorate  in  theoretical  physics  in  1984.  Between  1981  and  1983,  Helmbrecht  worked  as  a  research  assistant  for  the  Institute  of  Theoretical  Physics  at  the  Ruhr  University.  For  the  following  two  years,  he  ran  the  Software  Development  Department  of  the  Bergische  University  in  Wuppertal.  Moving  to  Messerschmitt-­‐Bölkow-­‐Blohm  GmbH  (MBB)  in  Munich,  the  predecessor  of  today´s  EADS,  in  1985,  Helmbrecht  began  his  career  as  a  systems  analyst,  working  on  a  German  Chinese  project.  He  advanced  to  project  leader  one  year  later.  Over  this  period,  he  successfully  completed  a  two-­‐year  executive  management  training  program  for  high  potentials.  Between  1988  and  1989,  he  was  personal  assistant  to  the  Head  of  the  Military  Aircraft  Division.    In  1990,  Helmbrecht  was  assigned  the  position  of  Head  of  the  Technical  Data  Systems  Department,  and  between  1992  and  1995,  he  functioned  as  Information  Technology  Programme  Manager,  assuming  responsibility  for  the  program  and  project  management  of  information  technology  in  the  military  aircraft  product  group.  In  1995,  Helmbrecht  was  appointed  CIO  of  the  Bayerische  Versorgungskammer,  a  public  insurance  institution  for  pensions.  As  Director  and  Division  Manager  of  Information  Processing,  he  was  responsible  for  data  processing,  information  technology  and  security,  application  development,  as  well  as  data  center  and  network  infrastructure.  Here,  he  succeeded  in  introducing  several  entrepreneurial  operating  methods.    Helmbrecht  became  President  of  the  Federal  Office  for  Information  Security  (BSI)  in  Bonn  in  2003.  In  this  position,  he  successfully  developed  the  agency´s  central  service  provision  for  information  security  within  the  German  Federal  Government.  In  addition,  he  spearheaded  cooperation  between  BSI  and  the  IT  security  industry,  as  well  as  raising  public  awareness  of  information  security  issues.  In  2009,  Helmbrecht  was  appointed  as  Executive  Director  of  ENISA  by  its  Management  Board,  following  a  presentation  to  the  European  Parliament’s  ITRE  committee.  Under  Helmbrecht’s  leadership,  ENISA  has  consolidated  its  role  as  a  center  of  network  and  information  security  expertise,  and  continued  its  work  to  facilitate  cooperation  in  network  and  information  security  across  Europe.  In  November  2010,  Helmbrecht  was  appointed  honorary  professor  at  the  Institut  für  Technische  Informatik  at  the  Universität  der  Bundeswehr  in  Munich,  Germany.    

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Ryuichi  Hirano  

Counsellor,  International  Strategy  Group,    National  Center  of  Incident  Readiness  and  Strategy  for  Cybersecurity,  Cabinet  Secretariat  of  Japan    Ryuichi  Hirano  is  a  Counsellor  at  the  International  Strategy  Group  of  the  National  Center  of  Incident  Readiness  and  Strategy  for  Cybersecurity  at  the  Cabinet  Secretariat  of  Japan,  a  position  he  has  held  since  2014.Hirano  began  his  career  in  the  Ministry  of  Foreign  Affairs  of  Japan  in  1988.  In  1992,  he  became  the  Second  Secretary  at  the  Embassy  of  Japan  in  Russia.  He  was  then  named  Principal  Deputy  Director  of  the  Ocean  Division  in  1997.  From  1999,  Hirano  acted  as  the  First  Secretary  of  the  Embassy  of  Japan  in  Australia,  followed  by  the  embassy  in  Russia  in  2001.  In  2003,  he  stayed  at  the  Japanese  embassy  in  Russia  where  he  became  a  Counsellor.  Hirano  was  named  Senior  Coordinator  of  the  Second  Middle  East  Division  in  2004.  Following  this,  he  became  Director  of  the  Conventional  Arms  Division  in  the  Disarmament,  Non-­‐proliferation  and  Science  Department.  Between  2009  and  2011,  he  was  the  Director  for  Operation  of  the  Secretariat  of  International  Peace  Cooperation  Headquarters  at  the  Japanese  Cabinet  Office.  After  this  he  returned  to  the  embassy  in  Russia  as  Minister-­‐Counsellor  and  finally  Minister  in  2012,  before  moving  to  his  current  position.      Hirano  received  his  B.A.  from  the  University  of  Tokyo  in  1988  and  an  M.A.  from  Stanford  University  in  1991.  

 

Rick  Howard  

Chief  Security  Officer,  Palo  Alto  Networks      

Rick  is  the  Chief  Security  Officer  (CSO)  for  Palo  Alto  Networks  where  he  oversees  the  company’s  internal  security  program,  leads  the  Palo  Alto  Networks  Threat  Intelligence  Team  (Unit  42),  directs  the  company’s  efforts  on  the  Cyber  Threat  Alliance  Information  Sharing  Group,  hosts  the  CyberSecurity  Canon  Project,  and  provides  thought  leadership  for  the  company  and  the  CyberSecurity  community  at  large.  His  prior  jobs  include  the  CISO  for  TASC,  the  GM  of  iDefense,  the  SOC  Director  at  Counterpane  and  the  Commander  of  the  U.S.  Army’s  Computer  Emergency  Response  Team  where  he  coordinated  network  defense,  network  intelligence  and  network  attack  operations  for  the  Army's  global  network.  Rick  holds  a  Master  of  Computer  Science  degree  from  the  Naval  Postgraduate  School  and  an  engineering  degree  from  the  US  Military  Academy.  He  also  taught  computer  science  at  the  Academy  from  1990  to  1995.  He  has  published  many  academic  papers  on  technology  and  security  and  has  contributed  as  an  executive  editor  to  two  books:  Cyber  Fraud:  Tactics,  Techniques  and  Procedures  and  Cyber  Security  Essentials.  The  Christian  Science  Monitor  named  him  a  Passcode  Influencer  in  2015;  a  pool  of  70  experts  from  across  government,  the  private  sector,  research,  and  the  privacy  advocacy  community  who  are  the  big  thinkers  on  security  and  privacy.  

   

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Wolfgang  Ischinger  Chairman,  Munich  Security  Conference;  Member,  Board  of  Directors,  EastWest  Institute    Ambassador  Ischinger  is  Chairman  of  the  Munich  Security  Conference  (MSC).  He  also  serves  on  the  Supervisory  Board  of  Allianz  Deutschland  AG,  and  on  the  European  Advisory  Board  of  Investcorp,  London.  He  served  as  Deputy  Foreign  Minister  (State  Secretary)  of  Germany  from  1998  to  2001.    From  2006  to  2008,  he  was  the  Federal  Republic  of  Germany's  Ambassador  in  London  and  from  2001  to  2006,  in  Washington,  D.C.  In  2007,  he  represented  the  European  Union  in  the  Troika  negotiations  on  the  future  of  Kosovo.  In  2014,  he  served  as  the  Special  Representative  of  the  OSCE  Chairman-­‐In-­‐Office  promoting  national  dialogue  in  the  Ukrainian  crisis.  He  currently  chairs  the  OSCE  “Eminent  Persons  Panel  on  European  Security.”  The  panel  is  mandated  to  offer  recommendations  on  how  to  build  a  more  resilient  architecture  of  European  security.  Ambassador  Ischinger  studied  law  at  the  universities  of  Bonn  and  Geneva  and  obtained  his  law  degree  in  1972.  He  did  graduate  and  postgraduate  work  at  the  Fletcher  School  of  Law  and  Diplomacy  and  at  Harvard  Law  School,  Cambridge,  USA  (M.A.,  1973).    Ambassador  Ischinger  has  published  widely  on  foreign  and  security  policy  as  well  as  on  European  and  transatlantic  issues.  He  is  a  member  of  the  Trilateral  Commission,  the  European  Council  on  Foreign  Relations  and  of  the  Governing  Board  of  SIPRI,  Stockholm.  He  also  serves  on  the  Boards  of  the  Atlantic  Council  of  the  U.S.,  the  American  Institute  of  Contemporary  German  Studies  (AICGS),  the  American  Academy,  Berlin  and  SWP,  Berlin.  He  has  been  an  Adjunct  Professor  at  the  University  of  Tübingen  and  will  start  teaching  as  a  Senior  Professor  at  the  Hertie  School  of  Governance,  Berlin  in  2015.    

Jonathan  King  

Vice  President,  Platform  Strategy  and  Business  Development,  CenturyLink      Jonathan  is  Vice  President,  Platform  Strategy  and  Business  Development  for  CenturyLink,  leading  cloud  and  managed  services  platform  strategy,  business  development,  commercial  modeling  and  M&A  for  CenturyLink.  Prior  to  Savvis,  Jonathan  was  SVP  of  WW  Business  Development  at  Joyent,  an  innovative  cloud  computing  company  based  in  San  Francisco.  Before  Joyent,  Jonathan  held  various  positions  with  Verizon  leading  teams  designing  

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complex  hosting,  managed  services  and  outsourcing  solutions  for  commercial  and  government  customers.  Jonathan  joined  Verizon  by  way  of  acquisition  when  Verizon/MCI  acquired  Totality  where  he  was  VP  of  Alliance  Development.  Prior  to  Totality,  Jonathan  was  VP  of  Strategic  Alliances  for  Exodus  Communications  where  he  led  a  global  team  responsible  for  system  integrator  and  technology  partner  alliances.    Jonathan  holds  a  B.A.  in  History  from  Miami  University,  a  J.D.  from  Loyola  University  Chicago  School  of  Law  and  a  Master  of  Laws  in  Intellectual  Property  and  Technology  Law  from  Washington  University  School  of  Law.  Jonathan  recently  co-­‐authored,  with  Professor  Neil  Richards,  The  Three  Paradoxes  of  Big  Data  (Stanford  Law  Review  Online  2013)  and  Big  Data  Ethics  (Wake  Forest  Law  Review  2014).  Jonathan  is  now  co-­‐authoring,  with  Professor  Richards,  a  book  chapter  called  "Big  Data  and  the  Future  for  Privacy"  published  in  a  handbook  of  research  on  digital  transformations.  

 

Susan  Landau  

Professor,  Cybersecurity  Policy,  Worcester  Polytechnic  Institute;  Visiting  Professor,  Computer  Science,  University  College  London    Susan  Landau  is  Professor  of  Cybersecurity  Policy  in  the  Department  of  Social  Science  and  Policy  Studies  at  Worcester  Polytechnic  Institute  and  holds  a  Visiting  Professor  appointment  in  the  Computer  Science  Department  at  University  College  London.    Landau  has  been  a  senior  staff  Privacy  Analyst  at  Google,  a  Distinguished  Engineer  at  Sun  Microsystems,  and  a  faculty  member  at  the  University  of  Massachusetts  at  Amherst  and  at  Wesleyan  University.  She  has  also  held  visiting  positions  at  Harvard,  Cornell,  Yale  and  the  Mathematical  Sciences  Research  Institute.      Landau  is  the  author  of  Surveillance  or  Security?  The  Risks  Posed  by  New  Wiretapping  Technologies  (MIT  Press,  2011)  and  co-­‐author,  with  Whitfield  Diffie,  of  Privacy  on  the  Line:  The  Politics  of  Wiretapping  and  Encryption  (MIT  Press,  1998,  rev.  ed.  2007).  She  has  written  numerous  scientific  and  policy  research  papers,  and  has  also  published  in  other  venues,  including  Science,  Scientific  American  and  the  Washington  Post    Landau  has  testified  in  Congress  on  cybersecurity  and  on  electronic  surveillance.  Landau  currently  serves  on  the  Computer  Science  Telecommunications  Board  of  the  National  Academies  of  Sciences,  Engineering,  and  Medicine,  and  has  previously  served  on  the  National  Science  Foundation's  Directorate  for  Computer  and  Information  Science  and  Engineering  and  the  National  Institute  of  Standards  and  Technology's  Information  Security  and  Privacy  Advisory  Board.  A  2012  Guggenheim  fellow,  Landau  was  a  2010-­‐2011  fellow  at  the  Radcliffe  Institute  for  Advanced  Study,  the  recipient  of  the  2008  Women  of  Vision  Social  Impact  Award,  and  is  also  a  fellow  of  the  American  Association  for  the  Advancement  of  Science  and  of  the  Association  for  Computing  Machinery.  She  received  her  BA  from  Princeton,  her  MS  from  Cornell  and  her  PhD  from  MIT.        

   

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Jean-­‐Yves  Latournerie  

Prefect,  Government  Special  Advisor  for  the  Fight  against  Cyber  Threats,  Ministry  of  the  Interior  of  France      Jean-­‐Yves  Latournerie  is  a  Prefect.  In  December  2014,  he  was  appointed  as  the  first  Government  Special  Advisor,  in  charge  of  coordinating  the  fight  against  cyber  threats  with  the  French  Ministry  of  Interior.    Trained  as  an  engineer  (1979)  and  a  graduate  of  Ecole  Nationale  d’Administration  (ENA  1986),  Jean-­‐Yves  Latournerie  has  occupied  senior  positions  in  different  sectors  of  the  French  public  administration  during  the  last  fifteen  years,  including  that  of:        Chief  of  Information  and  Communication  Systems  for  the  Ministry  of  Interior  (2001-­‐2005).  This  directorate  is  endowed  with  a  staff  of  3,000  people,  among  them  700  engineers,  executives  and  technicians  in  corporate  services.  It  is  in  charge  of  conception,  deployment  and  exploitation  of  big  IT  applications  as  well  as  networks  and  communications  infrastructures  for  the  national  police  forces,  prefectures,  and  all  the  corporate  and  territorial  services  of  the  ministry.    Prefect  of  Ardèche  (2005-­‐2007).      Member  of  the  High  Council  for  the  State’s  Territorial  Administration  (CSATE)    from  2007  to  2009,  in  charge  of  assessing  and  advising  prefects  and  deputy  prefects,  working  at  a  local  level.    CEO  of  Grand  Lyon  (2009-­‐2011).  This  territorial  entity  includes  58  municipalities,  1,300,000  inhabitants,  and  its  administration  is  composed  of  4,700  collaborators.    More  recently,  Jean-­‐Yves  Latournerie  was  CEO  of  the  new  National  Council  for  Private  Security  Activities  (CNAPS)  from  2011  to  2014).  The  CNAPS  has  been  set  up  to  regulate  and  improve  the  ethics  of  the  private  security  industry  with  preventive  policing,  regulating  access  to  the  industry,  ensuring  compliance  with  regulations  and  providing  advice  and  assistance.    

     

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Sally  Long  Director,  The  Open  Group  Trusted  Technology  Forum    Sally  currently  is  the  Director  of  The  Open  Group  Trusted  Technology  Forum  (OTTF),  an  international  forum  of  industry  and  government  working  together  to  increase  trust  in  the  global  technology  supply  chain.  To  achieve  this,  the  OTTF  is  driving  the  development  and  adoption  of  global  standards  and  accreditation  programs  for  technology  providers,  component  suppliers,  integrators,  re-­‐sellers  and  distributors  throughout  the  supply  chain.    As  the  OTTF  Forum  Director,  she  is  responsible  for  managing  the  consensus  development  of  the  forum  deliverables  and  for  facilitating  global  outreach  and  harmonization  activities.  She  was  also  a  major  contributor  to  The  Open  Group  Testimony  for  a  U.S.  Congressional  Subcommittee  regarding  the  significance  of  the  OTTF  government-­‐industry  partnership  and  the  OTTF  work  on  organizational  best  practices  for  securing  the  global  supply  chain.    Sally  has  been  managing  customer-­‐supplier  forums  and  collaborative  development  projects  for  over  twenty  years.  She  was  the  release  engineering  section  manager  for  all  multi-­‐vendor  collaborative  technology  development  projects  at  the  Open  Software  Foundation  (OSF),  in  Cambridge,  Massachusetts.  Following  the  merger  of  the  OSF  and  X/Open  under  The  Open  Group,  she  served  as  the  director  for  multiple  forums  within  The  Open  Group.  Sally  was  also  instrumental  in  business  development  and  program  definition  for  certification  programs  developed  and  operated  by  The  Open  Group  for  other  consortia;  for  the  North  American  State  and  Provincial  Lotteries  (NASPL)  and  for  the  Near  Field  Communication  (NFC)  Forum.    Sally  has  a  Bachelor  of  Science  degree  in  Electrical  Engineering  from  Northeastern  University  in  Boston,  Massachusetts,  and  a  Bachelor  of  Science  degree  in  Allied  Medicine:  Occupational  Therapy  from  The  Ohio  State  University  in  Columbus,  Ohio.  

 

Lu  Chuanying  Research  Fellow,  Shanghai  Institute  for  International  Studies    Mr.  Lu  Chuanying  is  a  research  fellow  of  Shanghai  Institute  for  International  Studies  (2009).  He  was  a  visiting  fellow  at  the  Center  for  Strategic  and  International  Studies  with  Freeman  Chair  in  China  Studies.  Currently,  he  is  working  for  the  China  Cyberspace  Administration.  Mr.  Lu  specializes  in  cyberspace  governance  and  cybersecurity.  He  has  published  a  couple  of  articles  on  the  issues  of  cyberspace  in  journals  and  newspapers  including  Cyberspace  Governance  and  Cyber  Security.  Mr.  Lu  has  also  contributed  to  a  variety  of  research  projects  related  with  cyberspace  governance  strategy  and  American  cybersecurity  strategy  sponsored  by  above  government  agencies.    He  has  attended  several  academic  activities  on  the  issue  of  cyberspace  home  and  abroad.  As  a  member  of  the  Chinese  government  delegation,  he  attended  the  Symposium  on  International  Security  (June,  2013)  and  the  2013  Seoul  Cyberspace  Conference  organized  by  the  ROK  Foreign  Ministry  in  17-­‐18,  October  2013.  He  participated  in  the  Third  Chinese-­‐  Russian  Youth  Project  in  International  Relations  (July,  2013),  Moscow,  Russia  and  Public  Governance  in  a  Comparative  Perspective:  China  and  the  West,  Shanghai,  China  (June,  2013).    

   

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Preetam  Maloor  Strategy  and  Policy  Advisor,  Corporate  Strategy  Division,  International  Telecommunication  Union  (ITU)    Preetam  Maloor  is  a  Strategy  and  Policy  Advisor  in  the  Corporate  Strategy  Division  of  the  ITU  General  Secretariat  and  an  expert  on  international  Internet-­‐related  public  policy  matters.  He  has  been  a  key  member  of  the  ITU  Secretariat  at  several  major  conferences  including  the  2012  World  Conference  on  International  Telecommunications  (WCIT),  2010  and  2014  ITU  Plenipotentiary  conferences  and  the  2009  and  2013  World  Telecommunication/ICT  Policy  Forums  (WTPF).  He  also  serves  as  the  Secretary  of  the  ITU  Council  Working  Group  on  international  Internet-­‐related  public  policy  issues.  Prior  to  joining  ITU,  Preetam  spent  nearly  10  years  in  the  private  sector,  working  primarily  at  research  organizations  such  as  Intelligent  Automation  Inc,  a  Rockville,  Maryland-­‐based  research  think-­‐tank,  focusing  on  artificial  intelligence-­‐based  applications,  and  at  AT&T  Research  Labs  in  Florham  Park,  NJ.    He  holds  Masters  degrees  in  Computer  Science  from  Texas  A&M  University,  College  Station,  and  in  Engineering  and  Public  Policy  from  the  University  of  Maryland,  College  Park.  He  has  a  Bachelor  degree  in  Computer  Science  and  Engineering  from  the  University  of  Mumbai.      

Veni  Markovski  Vice-­‐President,  UN  Engagement,  Internet  Corporation  for  Assigned  Names  and  Numbers  (ICANN)    Since  March  2014,  Veni  Markovski  has  been  ICANN's  vice-­‐president,  responsible  for  the  relations  with  the  United  Nations  and  the  UN  Agencies  and  UN  Permanent  Missions  in  New  York.  He  is  also  responsible  for  high-­‐level  cybersecurity  cooperation.  Markovski  lives  in  New  York  City.    Markovski  was  born  1968  in  Skopie,  Macedonia.  He  started  working  on  the  Internet  in  September  1990,  by  becoming  one  of  the  first  system  operators  of  a  FidoNet  Bulletin  Board  System  in  Sofia,  Bulgaria.  Between  1990  and  1993,  he  was  working  as  freelance  journalist  for  Standard  Daily  and  Computer  for  you,  with  publications  in  other  Bulgarian  newspapers  and  magazines.  By  1993,  he  co-­‐founded  an  Internet  Service  Provider  in  Bulgaria—BOL.BG,  the  second  in  the  country’s  history.  In  2008,  the  company  was  sold  to  an  international  investment  fund.  In  1995,  he  co-­‐founded  the  Bulgarian  Internet  Society.  

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He  was  the  chairman  of  the  Bulgarian  President's  IT  Advisory  Committee  (2002-­‐2012),  and  advised  on  International  Projects  the  Chairman  of  the  State  Agency  for  IT  and  Communications  to  the  Council  of  Ministers  of  the  Republic  of  Bulgaria  (2005-­‐2009).      Markovski  has  been  a  member  of  the  Bulgarian  delegation  to  the  UN  World  Summit  on  Information  Society,  and  a  member  of  the  Advisory  Group  to  the  Internet  Governance  Forum.  He  was  a  member  of  the  ICANN  Board  (2003-­‐2006).  He  served  as  a  member  of  the  Board  of  Trustees  of  the  Internet  Society  (2002-­‐2007),  the  Internet  Society  of  New  York  (2007-­‐2010),  and  on  the  Board  of  Directors  of  the  Computers  Professionals  for  Social  Responsibility  (2003-­‐2005).  Markovski  was  Project  Manager  of  UNDP  projects  for  support  of  e-­‐government  initiatives  in  South-­‐eastern  Europe.  His  efforts  have  been  positively  reviewed  at  The  New  York  Times,  The  International  Herald  Tribune,  heise.de  and  others.  Markovski  has  also  served  as  project  contact  point  for  the  Bulgarian  ENUM  trial  (launched  on  April  13,  2006).    Markovski  is  a  graduate  of  the  Sofia  University  “St.  Kliment  Ochridski”  with  a  Master’s  of  Science  in  Law  (1997).  He  has  also  passed  training  by  the  International  Law  Development  Institute  in  Rome,  the  U.S.  Agency  for  International  Development  and  others.  He  has  hundreds  of  publications  in  Bulgarian  and  foreign  newspapers  and  magazines  since  1984.  He  is  also  a  frequent  presenter  at  different  IT  and  cybersecurity  related  conferences:  among  them  CFP  (San  Francisco,  CA,  USA);  MMAWG  (Washington,  DC,  USA);  WSIS  (Geneva,  Switzerland  and  Tunis,  Tunisia);  Wizards  of  OS  (Berlin,  Germany);  iWeek  (Joburg,  South  Africa);  FBI/Fordham  (New  York,  USA);  RANS  (Moscow,  Russia);  NATO  Forum  on  Security  (Istanbul,  Turkey);  Cybersecurity  forums  (Sofia,  Bulgaria;  Belgrade,  Serbia;  Moscow,  Russia;  New  York,  USA);  and  many  others.    Markovski  is  currently  serving  as  Chairman  of  the  Board  and  President  of  the  Internet  Society  of  Bulgaria.  From  2012  until  2014  he  served  as  the  vice-­‐president  of  ICANN  for  Russia,  CIS,  and  Eastern  Europe.  

 

Maurizio  Martellini  Scientific  Director,  Insubria  Center  on  International  Security  (ICIS)    Professor  Maurizio  Martellini  is  Director  of  the  Insubria  Center  on  International  Security  (ICIS),  Secretary  General  of  the  Landau  Network-­‐Fondazione  Volta  (LNFV),  Executive  Secretary  of  the  International  Working  Group  (IWG),  Professor  of  Physics  at  the  University  of  Insubria  (Como,  Italy)  and  Member  of  the  Pugwash  General  Conferences.  He  is  an  advisor  of  the  Italian  Ministry  of  Foreign  Affairs.    Professor  Martellini  is  an  expert  in  non-­‐proliferation  and  disarmament  issues.  As  ICIS  Director  and  LNFV  Secretary  General,  Professor  Martellini  organizes  international  conferences,  schools  and  workshops  and  edits  publications  as  well  as  specific  case  studies.  His  fields  of  research  and  analysis  are:  cybersecurity  of  nuclear  infrastructures;  global  scientist  engagement;  management  and  disposal  of  hazmats;  scientific  and  technological  aspects  concerning  international  security;  CBRN  risks  mitigation  issues;  science  and  engineering  diplomacy;  and  CBRN  education  and  awareness.  He  is  also  Team  Leader  or  Expert  of  different  EU  CBRN  CoE  projects.  

   

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Bruce  W.  McConnell  Senior  Vice  President,  EastWest  Institute    Bruce  McConnell  is  responsible  for  leading  EWI’s  communications  and  networking  with  public  and  private  sectors  around  the  world.  He  also  manages  the  institute’s  Cooperation  in  Cyberspace  Program,  which  includes  its  Worldwide  Cybersecurity  Initiative.    Beginning  in  2009,  McConnell  provided  programmatic  and  policy  leadership  to  the  cybersecurity  mission  at  the  U.S.  Department  of  Homeland  Security.  He  became  Deputy  Under  Secretary  for  Cybersecurity  in  2013,  and  responsible  for  ensuring  the  cybersecurity  of  all  federal  civilian  agencies  and  for  helping  the  owners  and  operators  of  the  most  critical  U.S.  infrastructure  protect  themselves  from  growing  cyber  threats.  During  his  tenure,  McConnell  was  instrumental  in  building  the  national  and  international  credibility  of  DHS  as  a  trustworthy  partner  that  relies  on  transparency  and  collaboration  to  protect  privacy  and  enhance  security.  McConnell  is  also  a  senior  advisor  at  the  Center  for  Strategic  and  International  Studies.  He  received  a  Master  of  Public  Administration  from  the  Evans  School  for  Public  Policy  at  the  University  of  Washington,  where  he  maintains  a  faculty  affiliation,  and  a  Bachelor  of  Sciences  from  Stanford  University.    

Angela  McKay  Director,  Cybersecurity  Policy  and  Strategy,  Microsoft    Ms.  Angela  McKay  is  Director  of  Cybersecurity  Policy  and  Strategy  in  the  Global  Security  Strategy  and  Diplomacy  team  at  Microsoft.  She  focuses  on  driving  strategic  change,  both  within  Microsoft  and  externally,  to  advance  trust  in  the  computing  ecosystem.  Ms.  McKay  leads  Microsoft’s  cybersecurity  policy  work  in  the  U.S.  and  engages  internationally  with  industry,  governments  and  civil  society  to  improve  security  and  stability  of  cyberspace  for  users  around  the  world.  Ms.  McKay  combines  technical  expertise  and  public  policy  acumen  to  develop  policies  that  support  development,  growth,  and  innovation,  and  advance  security,  privacy,  and  trust  in  the  Information  Age.    Ms.  McKay  serves  as  Microsoft’s  POC  for  the  National  Security  Telecommunications  Advisory  Committee  (NSTAC),  a  Presidential  advisory  committee  focused  on  maintaining  secure  and  resilient  communications  and  as  Secretary  of  the  IT  Sector  Coordinating  Council,  a  public-­‐private  partnership  between  the  IT  industry  and  the  U.S.  Government  focusing  on  critical  infrastructure  protection  and  cybersecurity.  She  also  serves  on  the  EastWest  Institute  Board  of  Councilors.  Prior  to  joining  Microsoft,  she  worked  at  Booz  Allen  Hamilton  and  BellSouth  Communications.  Ms.  McKay  holds  a  Bachelor’s  of  Industrial  and  Systems  Engineering  from  the  Georgia  Institute  of  Technology.  

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    Cody  Monk      

Special  Agent,  Federal  Bureau  of  Investigation  (FBI)    FBI  Special  Agent  Cody  Monk  is  based  in  Houston,  where  he  works  closely  with  academic  institutions  and  the  private  sector  on  cyber  and  intelligence  threats  and  teaches  on  a  myriad  of  cyber-­‐focused  foreign  affairs,  intelligence,  and  security  issues  to  international  audiences.  He  has  published  on  cybersecurity,  digital  currency,  and  cyber  crime  issues  in  international  journals  and  serves  on  several  international  task  forces  focused  on  the  social  and  statecraft  side  of  cyber  and  modernizing  international  procedures  against  cyber-­‐enabled  crime.    A  former  internationally  recognized  bilingual  journalist  and  author,  SA  Monk’s  research  focuses  on  integrating  cybersecurity  practices  into  grand  strategy  in  both  public  and  private  entities,  intelligence  and  national  security  in  a  cyber-­‐enabled  world,  and  understanding  the  social  context  and  state-­‐level  implications  of  the  cyber  and  privacy  environments.  Before  the  FBI,  SA  Monk  wrote  for  several  major-­‐market  newspapers,  published  three  books,  founded  a  multi-­‐national  digital  media  and  sports  marketing  firm  and  taught  Spanish  at  the  university  level.  He  holds  BAs  in  Print  Journalism  and  Latin  American  Studies  from  Southern  Methodist  University;  an  MA  in  Latin  American  Studies  from  the  University  of  Miami;  and  an  MS  in  Strategic  Intelligence  from  the  National  Intelligence  University.      

Cameron  Munter  President  and  CEO,  EastWest  Institute    Cameron  Munter  has  been  named  the  Chief  Executive  Officer  of  the  EastWest  Institute,  effective  August  1,  2015.        Munter  has  been  a  career  diplomat,  serving  in  some  of  the  most  conflict-­‐ridden  areas  of  the  globe.  He  served  as  U.S.  Ambassador  to  Pakistan  from  2010-­‐2012,  where  he  guided  U.S.-­‐Pakistani  relations  through  a  strained  period,  including  the  operation  against  Osama  bin  Laden,  while  leading  a  2,500-­‐employee  embassy.  Previously  he  served  as  Ambassador  to  Serbia,  where  he  negotiated  Serbian  domestic  consensus  for  European  integration  and  managed  the  Kosovo  independence  crisis.  Munter  also  served  at  the  U.S.  Embassy  in  Baghdad,  overseeing  U.S.  civilian  and  military  cooperation  in  planning  the  drawdown  of  U.S.  troops.  In  Europe,  he  served  in  the  Czech  Republic  and  Poland,  where  he  helped  manage  the  American  contribution  to  those  countries’  integration  into  the  global  economy.  He  was  a  Director  at  the  National  Security  Council  at  the  White  House,  and  had  numerous  other  domestic  assignments  at  the  State  Department  in  Washington.      Before  joining  the  Foreign  Service,  Munter  taught  European  history  at  the  University  of  California  Los  Angeles.  He  also  taught  at  Columbia  University  School  of  Law  and  has  two  honorary  doctoral  degrees.  For  the  past  two  years,  Munter  has  been  Professor  of  International  Relations  at  Pomona  College  in  Claremont,  California,  as  well  as  a  Fellow  at  the  Kennedy  School  of  Government  at  Harvard  University.      Born  in  California  in  1954,  Munter  graduated  magna  cum  laude  from  Cornell  University  and  earned  a  doctorate  in  Modern  European  History  from  John  Hopkins  University.  

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Sami  Nassar  Vice  President  and  General  Manager,  Cyber  Security  Solutions,  NXP  Semiconductors    Veteran  Silicon  Valley  high-­‐tech  executive,  entrepreneur;  world  renown  as  digital  security  pioneer  with  a  legacy  of  creating  cross-­‐industry  solutions  and  game  changing  products  in  the  Telecom  and  Semiconductors  industries.    Previous  to  joining  NXP  Semiconductors,  Mr.  Nassar  held  key  executive  positions.  Among  them,  General  Manager  of  the  Advanced  Solution  Group  at  Renesas,  Managing  Director  of  Strategic  Marketing  for  Hitachi,  and  Managing  Director  of  Schlumberger’s  (now  Gemalto)  telecom  smart  cards  and  systems.He  also  founded  a  number  of  startup  companies  in  Silicon  Valley.  Among  them  TeleNAV,  a  leading  provider  of  location  based  services  now  publically  traded.He  holds  a  master’s  of  science  in  electrical  engineering  from  Ecole  Supérieure  des  Ingénieurs  ESIB  and  a  master’s  in  computer  science  from  Ecole  Supérieure  d'Electricité  SUPELEC.    

Jan  Neutze  Director  of  Cybersecurity  Policy,  Europe,  Middle  East  and  Africa  (EMEA),  Microsoft    Jan  Neutze  is  Director  of  Cybersecurity  Policy  at  Microsoft  responsible  for  Europe,  Middle  East,  and  Africa  (EMEA).  In  this  role  Jan  works  with  policy  and  technical  stakeholders  on  a  range  of  cybersecurity  issues,  including  security  strategy  and  policy,  cloud  security,  risk  management,  information  assurance  and  critical  infrastructure  protection.  In  2015,  Jan  was  appointed  to  the  ENISA  Permanent  Stakeholders'  Group  (PSG)  for  the  2015-­‐2017  term.  Before  taking  on  Microsoft's  EMEA  security  portfolio,  Jan  worked  in  Microsoft's  Trustworthy  Computing  (TwC)  group  at  Microsoft  Corp.  in  Redmond,  WA  focusing  on  cybersecurity  norms,  national  cybersecurity  policy,  cloud  security  as  well  as  engaging  with  partners  from  government,  international  organizations,  and  academia.  Jan  came  to  Microsoft  from  the  United  Nations  Headquarters  where  he  served  for  three  years  in  the  policy  planning  staff  of  the  UN  Secretary-­‐General  and  the  Department  of  Political  Affairs,  leading  a  range  of  cybersecurity  and  counterterrorism  projects.  Prior  to  his  work  at  the  UN,  Jan  led  a  range  of  transatlantic  security  policy  projects  at  the  German  Marshall  Fund  of  the  United  States  and  the  Atlantic  Council  of  the  United  States.  Jan  holds  a  J.D.  from  the  University  of  Muenster,  Germany  and  an  M.A.  in  Security  Studies  from  Georgetown  University  in  Washington,  DC.  

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Nicolas  Niemtchinow  

Co-­‐ordinator  for  Cyber  Security  and  Open  Data  to  the    Secretary  of  the  Ministry  of  Foreign  Affairs  of  France    Ambassador  Nicolas  Niemtchinow  is  Co-­‐ordinator  for  Cyber  Security  and  Open  Data  to  the  Secretary  of  the  Ministry  of  Foreign  Affairs  of  France.    Niemtchinow  began  his  career  with  the  French  Ministry  of  Foreign  Affairs  in  1995  where  he  was  posted  to  the  Strategic  Affairs,  Security  and  Disarmament  Directorate,  where  he  focused  on  such  issues  as  NATO,  European  defense,  and  operations  and  national  defense  policy.  After  this,  he  became  First  Secretary  at  the  French  Embassy  in  the  Russian  Federation.  Following  this,  he  was  transferred  to  Jordan  in  2002  where  he  served  as  Deputy  Head  of  Mission.  In  2005  Niemtchinow  returned  to  the  Strategic  Affairs,  Security  and  Disarmament  Directorate  where  he  served  as  Deputy  Director  for  Strategic  Affairs  until  2009.  Niemtchinow  then  moved  to  the  French  Ministry  of  Defense  where  he  served  as  a  Diplomatic  Counsellor.  In  2011,  he  became  Deputy  Director  at  the  Private  Office  of  Mr.  Alain  Juppe,  Minister  of  Foreign  and  European  Affairs  before  becoming  French  Permanent  Representative  to  the  United  Nations  Office  at  Geneva  and  to  other  international  organizations  in  Switzerland  in  2012.    Niemtchinow  is  a  graduate  of  the  Paris  Sorbonne  University,  where  he  got  a  degree  in  history;  the  Paris  School  of  Political  Studies;  the  Ecole  Normale  Supérieure  and  the  Ecole  Nationale  d’Administration.  He  is  married  with  three  children.    

Gregory  T.  Nojeim  Director,  Project  on  Freedom,  Security  and  Technology,    Center  for  Democracy  and  Technology    Gregory  T.  Nojeim  is  Director  of  the  Project  on  Freedom,  Security  and  Technology  at  the  Center  for  Democracy  and  Technology,  a  Washington,  D.C.  NGO  dedicated  to  Internet  freedom.  Greg  specializes  in  protecting  privacy  in  the  digital  age  against  intrusion  by  the  government.  He  is  a  recognized  expert  on  the  PATRIOT  Act,  FISA,  and  the  application  of  the  Fourth  Amendment  to  the  U.S.  Constitution  to  electronic  surveillance.      Greg  directs  CDT’s  privacy  initiatives  that  respond  to  the  2013  disclosures  about  NSA  surveillance  and  was  engaged  in  CDT’s  successful  efforts  to  promote  the  2015  USA  FREEDOM  Act.  He  leads  CDT’s  cybersecurity  work,  testifying  in  the  U.S.  Congress  on  the  impact  of  cybersecurity  proposals  on  privacy.  His  “Cybersecurity  and  Freedom  on  the  Internet”  appears  in  the  Journal  of  National  Security  Law  and  Policy.  He  is  also  involved  in  a  multi-­‐year  project  to  update  the  1986  Electronic  Communications  Privacy  Act.      Greg  sits  on  the  Department  of  Homeland  Security  Data  Privacy  and  Integrity  Advisory  Committee  and  on  the  Board  of  Directors  of  the  Global  Network  Initiative.  Prior  to  joining  CDT,  he  was  the  Associate  Director  of  the  ACLU’s  Washington  Legislative  Office.  He  received  his  law  degree  from  the  University  of  Virginia  in  1985,  where  he  sat  on  the  Editorial  Board  of  the  Virginia  Journal  of  International  Law.  He  graduated  from  the  University  of  Rochester,  NY  in  1981  with  a  B.A.  in  Political  Science.    

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  Joseph  S.  Nye  Distinguished  Service  Professor,  Kennedy  School  of  Government,  Harvard  University    Joseph  S.  Nye,  Jr.  is  University  Distinguished  Service  Professor  and  former  Dean  of  Harvard’s  Kennedy  School  of  Government.  He  received  his  bachelor's  degree  summa  cum  laude  from  Princeton  University,  won  a  Rhodes  Scholarship  to  Oxford,  and  earned  a  Ph.D.  in  political  science  from  Harvard.  He  has  served  as  Assistant  Secretary  of  Defense  for  International  Security  Affairs,  Chair  of  the  National  Intelligence  Council,  and  a  Deputy  Under  Secretary  of  State.  His  recent  books  include  Soft  Power,  The  Power  Game:  A  Washington  Novel,  The  Powers  to  Lead,  The  Future  of  Power,  Presidential  Leadership  and  the  Creation  of  the  American  Era  and  the  latest  released  in  2015—Is  the  American  Century  Over?  He  is  a  fellow  of  the  American  Academy  of  Arts  and  Sciences,  the  British  Academy,  and  the  American  Academy  of  Diplomacy.  In  a  recent  survey  of  international  relations  scholars,  he  was  rated  the  fifth  most  influential  over  the  past  20  years;  ranked  as  the  most  influential  scholar  on  American  foreign  policy,  and  in  2011,  Foreign  Policy  named  him  one  of  the  top  100  Global  Thinkers.  In  November  of  2014,  Emperor  Akihito  of  Japan  conferred  the  Order  of  the  Rising  Sun,  Gold  and  Silver  Star,  in  recognition  of  his  contribution  to  the  development  of  studies  on  Japan-­‐U.S.  security  and  to  the  promotion  of  the  mutual  understanding  between  Japan  and  the  United  States.    

Michael  O’Reirdan  

Senior  Fellow,  EastWest  Institute;    Engineering  Fellow,  Comcast    Mike  O’Reirdan  is  now  an  Engineering  Fellow  at  Comcast.  He  has  been  involved  with  the  design  and  operation  of  large-­‐scale  highly  available  public  facing  IT  systems  since  1990,  spending  11  years  in  this  space  working  for  Cable  &  Wireless  in  the  UK  and  overseas.  Since  joining  Comcast  in  2003,  Mike  has  been  responsible  for  multiple  technical  initiatives  particularly  in  the  identity  and  provisioning  space.  Currently  focused  on  security  issues,  Mike  is  responsible  for  the  architecture  of  the  current  Comcast  anti-­‐spam  platform  and  the  architecture  of  the  Comcast  anti-­‐bot  service,  Constant  Guard.    Mike  was  chairman  of  M3AAWG  from  January  2008  to  January  2013  and  now  serves  as  Chair  Emeritus.  M3AAWG  was  the  winner  of  the  2013  EWI  Worldwide  Cybersecurity  Award.  As  chairman  of  M3AAWG  Mike  led  the  organization  to  be  recognized  as  the  leading  operational  anti-­‐abuse  community  for  a  large  portion  of  the  global  ISP  industry,  producing  

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cybersecurity  best  practices  that  have  been  widely  implemented.  Mike  is  also  a  member  of  the  current  FCC  Communications  Security,  Reliability,  and  Interoperability  Council  (CSRIC  V)  where  he  works  on  DDOS  issues.  As  a  member  of  the  CSRIC  III,  Mike  chaired  Working  Group  7,  which  produced  the  Anti-­‐Bot  Code,  “ABCs  for  ISPs”.  Mike  is  active  in  the  IETF  and  is  one  of  the  co-­‐authors  of  the  IETF  RFC  on  bot  remediation,  RFC  6561.    Outside  of  work,  Mike  spends  much  of  his  time  working  on  old  motorbikes,  making  sure  that  his  house  from  1885  stays  in  one  piece  and  occasionally  goes  scuba  diving  in  warm  places  such  as  the  Red  Sea.    

Christopher  Painter  Coordinator  for  Cyber  Issues,  U.S.  Department  of  State    Mr.  Painter  has  been  on  the  vanguard  of  cyber  issues  for  over  twenty  years.  In  his  current  role  as  the  Secretary’s  first  Coordinator  for  Cyber  Issues,  Mr.  Painter  coordinates  and  leads  the  United  States’  diplomatic  efforts  to  advance  an  open,  interoperable,  secure  and  reliable  Internet  and  information  infrastructure.  He  works  closely  with  components  across  the  Department,  other  agencies,  the  White  House,  the  private  sector  and  civil  society  to  implement  the  President’s  International  Strategy  for  Cyberspace.  He  ensures  that  U.S.  foreign  policy  positions  on  cross-­‐cutting  cyber  issues  are  fully  synchronized.  These  issues  include  promoting  norms  of  responsible  state  behavior  and  cyber  stability,  advancing  cybersecurity,  fighting  cybercrime,  promoting  multi-­‐stakeholder  Internet  governance  and  advancing  Internet  freedom.    Mr.  Painter  and  his  team  have  launched  “whole  of  government”  cyber  dialogues  with  numerous  countries  (including  chairing  the  U.S.-­‐China  Cyber  Working  Group  established  by  Secretary  Kerry),  designed  and  carried  out  regional  capacity  building  initiatives,  worked  to  reduce  cyber  threats  worldwide  by  combatting  operational  threats  such  as  Distributed  Denial  of  Service  and  large-­‐scale  cyber  intrusions  for  the  purposes  of  stealing  intellectual  property  and  proprietary  business  information,  worked  to  ensure  that  fundamental  freedoms  can  be  exercised  online  and  worked  diplomatically  to  build  a  consensus  around  our  vision  of  an  open,  interoperable,  secure  and  reliable  cyberspace.  His  team  spearheaded  the  promotion  of  transparency  and  confidence-­‐building  measures  designed  to  reduce  the  risk  of  miscalculation  that  could  inadvertently  lead  to  conflict  in  cyberspace—resulting  in  the  negotiation  of  the  first  ever  bilateral  cyber  confidence  building  measures  that  were  announced  in  June  2013  by  President  Obama  and  President  Putin,  and  the  agreement  to  the  first  set  of  multi-­‐lateral  confidence  building  measures  in  the  Organization  for  Security  and  Cooperation  in  Europe.    Prior  to  joining  the  State  Department,  Mr.  Painter  served  in  the  White  House  as  Senior  Director  for  Cybersecurity  Policy  in  the  National  Security  Staff.  During  his  two  years  at  the  White  House,  Mr.  Painter  was  a  senior  member  of  the  team  that  conducted  the  President's  Cyberspace  Policy  Review  and  subsequently  served  as  Acting  Cybersecurity  Coordinator.  He  coordinated  the  development  of  the  President’s  2011  International  Strategy  for  Cyberspace  and  chaired  high-­‐level  interagency  groups  devoted  to  international  cyber  issues.  Mr.  Painter  began  his  federal  career  as  an  Assistant  U.S.  Attorney  in  Los  Angeles  where  he  led  some  of  the  most  high  profile  and  significant  cybercrime  prosecutions  in  the  country,  including  the  prosecution  of  notorious  computer  hacker  Kevin  Mitnick.  He  subsequently  helped  lead  the  case  and  policy  efforts  of  the  

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Computer  Crime  and  Intellectual  Property  Section  in  the  U.S.  Department  of  Justice  and  served,  for  a  short  time,  as  Deputy  Assistant  Director  of  the  F.B.I.'s  Cyber  Division.    For  over  fifteen  years,  Mr.  Painter  has  been  a  leader  in  international  cyber  issues.  He  has  represented  the  United  States  in  numerous  international  fora,  including  chairing  the  cutting  edge  G8  High  Tech  Crime  Subgroup  from  2002-­‐2012.  He  has  worked  with  dozens  of  foreign  governments  in  bi-­‐lateral  meetings  and  has  been  a  frequent  spokesperson  and  presenter  on  cyber  issues  around  the  globe.  Mr.  Painter  is  a  graduate  of  Stanford  Law  School  and  Cornell  University.    

Tom  Patterson  Vice  President  and  General  Manager,  Global  Security  Solutions,  Unisys    Tom  Patterson  is  the  Vice  President  and  General  Manager  of  the  Unisys  Global  Security  Solutions  business.  He  brings  more  than  30  years  of  leading-­‐edge  security  experience,  expertise,  and  innovation  helping  commercial  and  public  sector  clients  tackle  some  of  their  most  complex  security  challenges.  In  his  role  at  Unisys,  he  leads  the  development  and  delivery  of  advanced  security  products,  consulting  and  managed  services.    Recognized  by  Trust!  Magazine  as  a  2015  global  thought  leader  on  trust,  Tom  combines  his  immersion  in  all  facets  of  security  with  his  dynamic  Silicon  Valley  approach  and  executive  experience  with  government  organizations  and  big-­‐four  and  other  companies  to  improve  businesses  around  the  world.  Having  served  as  a  CSO  (MCC),  partner  (Deloitte),  chief  eCommerce  strategist  (IBM),  and  a  founder  of  a  tech  startup  backed  by  the  Carlyle  Group,  Tom  thrives  on  delivering  real  security  value  that  earns  client  trust  and  grows  businesses.    Tom’s  teams  at  Unisys  defend  many  of  the  world’s  great  enterprises  by  leading  the  advanced  technical  teams  needed  to  identify  risks,  a  full  suite  of  innovative  products  to  address  them,  and  the  strategic  board/executive  advisory  services  necessary  to  help  prevent  them.  Prior  to  this  role,  Tom  has  run  global  security  professional  services  businesses,  served  on  three  public  boards,  provided  governance  to  early  stage  companies,  and  has  written  a  book  on  security  (Mapping  Security)  that,  according  to  Wired’s  editor,  “speaks  directly  to  businesspeople  around  the  globe”  and,  according  to  Google’s  Chief  Internet  Evangelist,  is  “compelling  and  practical.”  As  a  global  thought  leader  that  is  accepted  by  c-­‐suite  and  in  board  executives  around  the  world,  Tom  has  lectured  on  security  at  both  the  Wharton  School  and  Cal  Poly,  frequently  keynotes  at  corporate  and  government  events,  and  is  a  regular  guest  security  analyst  for  media.  He  has  helped  secure  

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projects  as  diverse  as  the  launches  of  a  space  shuttle  and  aircraft  carrier,  protected  oil  rigs,  banks  and  hospitals  from  terrorists,  organized  criminals,  and  foreign  intelligence  services,  as  well  as  protected  high  profile  programs  at  the  United  Nations  and  United  Way.    The  common  thread  to  Tom’s  diverse  security  career  is  building  and  projecting  the  trust  that  is  necessary  to  compete.  With  his  Top  Secret  clearance,  Tom  also  works  pro  bono  with  the  U.S.  Congress,  Federal  law  enforcement,  and  the  Intelligence  and  Counter-­‐Intelligence  communities,  and  has  contributed  to  Presidential  Executive  Orders    

Donald  (Andy)  Purdy  Chief  Security  Officer,  Huawei  Technologies  USA    Andy  Purdy  joined  Huawei  Technologies  USA  as  Chief  Security  Officer  in  July  2012.  Andy  oversees  Huawei  USA's  cyber  security  assurance  strategy  and  system,  and  supports  the  global  security  system  adopted  by  all  the  company’s  business  groups  and  departments.    Immediately  before  joining  Huawei  USA,  Andy  worked  as  Chief  Cybersecurity  Strategist  for  Computer  Sciences  Corporation  (CSC).  In  this  role  he  provided  strategic  input  to  the  development  and  implementation  of  a  coordinated,  company-­‐wide  initiative  to  address  the  cybersecurity  needs  of  CSC’s  global  client  base,  and  worked  in  national  and  international  venues  to  influence  cyber  public  policy  and  awareness.  Andy  is  the  Huawei  global  lead  for  the  EastWest  Institute’s  Global  Cooperation  in  Cyberspace  Initiative  and  the  Open  Group  Trusted  Technology  Forum  supply  chain  standard  and  accreditation  program.  He  is  also  a  member  of  the  Software  and  Supply  Chain  Assurance  Working  Group,  hosted  by  the  DoD,  DHS,  NIST  and  GSA.    Andy  was  a  member  of  the  White  House  staff  team  that  helped  to  draft  the  U.S.  National  Strategy  to  Secure  Cyberspace  (2003),  and  later  went  to  the  Department  of  Homeland  Security  (DHS)  to  help  form  and  launch  the  National  Cyber  Security  Division  (NCSD)  and  the  U.S.  Computer  Emergency  Readiness  Team  (US-­‐CERT),  where  he  later  served  as  acting  director  from  2004-­‐2006,  as  the  then-­‐lead  cyber  official  at  DHS  and  the  lead  cyber  official  of  the  U.S.  government.  At  DHS,  he  also  served  as  Co-­‐chair  of  the  National  Cyber  Response  Coordination  Group  (NCRCG),  the  principal  U.S.  interagency  group  to  prepare  for  and  respond  to  cyber  incidents  of  national  significance.  He  also  served  as  the  DHS  representative  to  the  Committee  on  National  Security  System  (CNSS)  that  sets  policy  for  the  nation’s  classified  IT  networks.  In  2006-­‐2007,  overlapping  his  service  in  government  and  the  private  sector,  Andy  served  on  the  Defense  Science  Board  Task  Force  on  Mission  Impact  of  Foreign  Influence  on  DOD  Software.  Before  joining  the  White  House  staff,  Andy  served  as:  Acting  General  Counsel  and,  before  that,  Chief  Deputy  General  Counsel,  at  the  U.S.  Sentencing  Commission.  Earlier  in  his  career  he  served  as  a  federal  prosecutor  in  Philadelphia,  Pennsylvania,  Senior  Staff  Counsel  of  the  House  Select  Committee  on  Assassinations  (President  John  Kennedy),  Special  Counsel  to  the  U.S.  House  Ethics  Committee,  and  Counsel  to  the  U.S.  Senate  Impeachment  Trial  Committee.  He  also  served  for  five  years  in  network  television  news  as  an  Associate  Producer  for  NBC  News  magazines,  and  Producer  for  the  CBS  News  broadcast  NIGHTWATCH  with  Charlie  Rose  in  Washington,  D.C.    

   

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Lt.  General  (ret.)  Harry  D.  Raduege,  Jr.    Chairman,  Center  for  Cyber  Innovation,  Deloitte;  Senior  Advisor,  Deloitte  &  Touche  LLP    Lieutenant  General  Harry  D.  Raduege,  Jr.  (USAF,  Ret)  is  Chairman  of  the  Deloitte  Center  for  Cyber  Innovation  and  serves  as  a  Senior  Advisor  and  Director  of  Cyber  Risk  Services  at  Deloitte  &  Touche  LLP.  General  Raduege  served  35  years  in  the  U.S.  military.  He  worked  in  the  areas  of  technology,  including  telecommunications,  space,  information  and  network  operations.  He  served  more  than  17  years  in  joint  duty  assignments  and  four  times  as  a  Department  of  Defense  activity  CIO.  As  the  Director  of  the  Defense  Information  Systems  Agency,  he  led  DOD  global  network  operations  by  directing  the  planning,  engineering,  and  implementation  of  interoperable  communications  and  intelligence  systems  serving  the  President,  Secretary  of  Defense,  and  all  military  services.  Notably,  he  led  efforts  to  restore  communications  to  the  Pentagon  following  the  September  11th  terrorist  attacks,  significantly  upgraded  Presidential  communications,  and  led  the  successful  expansion  of  the  Department's  Global  Information  Grid  through  a  $1  billion  transformational  communications  program.  Concurrently,  as  the  Manager  of  the  National  Communications  System,  he  led  the  prioritization  of  communications  restoration  throughout  New  York  City  following  the  September  11th  terrorist  attacks.  He  also  was  appointed  by  the  Secretary  of  Defense  as  the  Commander  of  the  Joint  Task  Force  for  Global  Network  Operations  and  Deputy  Commander  for  Global  Network  Operations  and  Defense  for  the  U.S.  Strategic  Command.  General  Raduege  also  serves  as  a  Special  Government  Employee  on  the  Homeland  Security  Science  &  Technology  Committee  at  the  Department  of  Homeland  Security  and  as  a  Senior  Counselor  at  The  Cohen  Group.      

Latha  Reddy  

Distinguished  Fellow,  EastWest  Institute;    Former  Deputy  National  Security  Advisor  of  India    Latha  Reddy  is  the  former  Deputy  National  Security  Adviser  of  India.  In  addition  to  assisting  National  Security  Adviser  Shiv  Shankar  Menon,  Ms.  Reddy  was  responsible  for  cybersecurity  and  other  critical  internal  and  external  security  issues.  Ms.  Reddy  served  in  the  Indian  Foreign  Service  from  1975-­‐2011.  During  her  diplomatic  career  she  served  in  Lisbon,  Washington  D.C.,  Kathmandu,  Brasilia,  Durban,  Vienna  and  Bangkok.  She  served  as  Ambassador  of  India  to  Portugal  (2004-­‐2006)  and  to  Thailand  (2007-­‐2009).  She  was  Secretary  (East)  in  the  Ministry  of  External  Affairs  in  Delhi  (2010-­‐2011)  with  overall  charge  of  India’s  bilateral  and  regional  relations  with  Asia.  She  was  then  appointed  as  India’s  

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Deputy  National  Security  Advisor  in  the  Prime  Minister’s  Office  from  2011-­‐2013.  Ms.  Reddy  has  extensive  experience  in  foreign  policy,  and  in  bilateral,  regional  and  multilateral  negotiations.  In  addition,  she  has  expertise  on  security  and  strategic  issues  and  has  worked  on  strategic  technology  policies,  particularly  on  cyber  issues  relating  to  cybersecurity  policy,  international  cyber  cooperation  and  Internet  governance.    Ms.  Reddy  is  currently  involved  with  several  organizations  and  think  tanks,  both  globally  and  in  India  and  holds  the  following  positions  among  others:    -­‐  Commissioner,  Global  Commission  on  Internet  Governance  (GCIG)  -­‐  Distinguished  Fellow,  EastWest  Institute,  New  York  -­‐  Member,  International  Advisory  Board,  Kaspersky  Labs,  Moscow  -­‐  Member,  India-­‐Pakistan  Water  Dialogue,  South  Asia  Centre,  Atlantic  Council,  Washington  -­‐  Director,  Deccan  Heritage  Foundation,  London  -­‐  Director,  Board  of  Janalakshmi  Financial  Services,  Bangalore  -­‐  Member,  Bangalore  Political  Action  Committee  (B-­‐PAC)  -­‐  Trustee,  Bangalore  Little  Theatre  (BLT)  Foundation,  Bangalore  -­‐  Distinguished  Fellow,  Observer  Research  Foundation,  Delhi    Ms.  Reddy’s  other  interests  include  travel,  literature  and  the  performing  arts.  She  speaks  English,  Portuguese,  French  and  several  Indian  languages  including  Hindi,  Telugu,  Tamil  and  Kannada.    

Jason  D.  Reichelt  Senior  Adviser,  Crime  Prevention  and  Criminal  Justice,    UN  Office  on  Drugs  and  Crime  (UNODC)    Jason  D.  Reichelt  is  currently  a  Senior  Adviser,  Crime  Prevention  and  Criminal  Justice,  in  the  New  York  Office  of  the  UN  Office  on  Drugs  and  Crime.  He  previously  worked  in  the  UNODC  Corruption  and  Economic  Crime  Branch  in  Vienna,  and  specializes  in  the  development,  implementation  and  evaluation  of  programs  and  projects  in  the  area  of  anti-­‐corruption.  In  that  capacity,  he  provided  technical  assistance  to  states  in  their  implementation  of  the  United  Nations  Convention  against  Corruption,  particularly  in  the  Middle  East  and  Northern  Africa.  In  addition  to  technical  assistance,  he  also  coordinated  policy  development  in  the  area  of  anti-­‐corruption  and  judicial  integrity,  including  the  review  and  analysis  of  emerging  issues  and  trends,  and  the  compilation  of  good  practices  in  corruption  prevention  and  enforcement.    Previously,  Mr.  Reichelt  served  as  a  Judicial  Affairs  Officer  in  the  Criminal  Law  and  Judicial  Advisory  Service  (CLJAS)  of  the  Office  of  Rule  of  Law  and  Security  Institutions  (OROLSI)  of  DPKO  in  New  York.  He  worked  as  an  advisor  on  issues  relating  to  the  establishment  and  capacity  building  of  the  justice  sector  in  peace  operations,  and  was  responsible  for  the  formulation  of  strategies  and  best  practices  for  justice  sector  programs  as  part  of  a  comprehensive  rule  of  law  and  human  rights  approach  to  justice  mechanisms  in  conflict  and  post-­‐conflict  environments.  He  advised  peace  operations  in  Liberia  and  Haiti,  and  monitored  the  justice  sector  in  Gaza.  Following  the  earthquake  of  12  January  2010,  Mr.  Reichelt  served  as  the  manager  for  the  CLJAS  Haiti  Disaster  Recovery  Cell  (formerly  the  Haiti  Crisis  Cell)  in  DPKO.    

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Before  CLJAS,  Mr.  Reichelt  served  in  the  Office  of  the  Prosecutor  (OTP)  at  the  UN  International  Criminal  Tribunal  for  the  former  Yugoslavia  in  The  Hague,  Netherlands.  He  also  has  field  experience  in  Tbilisi,  Georgia  from  2004-­‐2005,  providing  technical  guidance  and  support  to  the  Ministry  of  Justice,  the  General  Prosecutor's  Office,  and  the  defense  bar,  as  well  as  in  the  revision  of  the  Criminal  Procedure  Code  of  Georgia.  In  addition  to  his  overseas  assignments,  Mr.  Reichelt  has  served  as  a  Trial  Attorney  at  the  U.S.  Department  of  Justice,  a  state  criminal  prosecutor,  and  a  law  clerk  for  a  federal  judge  in  the  U.S.  Ninth  Circuit  Court  of  Appeals.  As  a  state  prosecutor,  Mr.  Reichelt  was  a  co-­‐founder  of  the  state’s  first  court  dedicated  to  crimes  of  domestic  violence,  and  developed  and  implemented  training  programs  to  combat  gender-­‐based  violence  and  enhance  victim  protection.    

Samir  Saran  

Senior  Fellow  and  Vice  President,  Observer  Research  Foundation      Samir  Saran  is  Senior  Fellow  and  Vice  President  at  the  Observer  Research  Foundation.  He  is  the  chair  of  Cyfy:  The  India  Conference  on  Cyber  Security  and  Internet  Governance,  an  annual  ORF  platform  that  is  India’s  premier  international  event  on  cybersecurity  and  cyber  governance,  bringing  together  government,  industry,  academia  and  civil  society.  He  is  also  the  editor  of  the  CyFy  journal,  Digital  Debates.  Samir  is  an  International  Fellow  of  the  International  Cyber  Policy  Centre  at  the  Australian  Strategic  Policy  Institute.    Apart  from  his  academic  publications,  Samir  is  a  prolific  writer  and  author.  He  has  frequent  columns  in  newspapers  such  as  the  Global  Times,  Times  of  India,  The  Hindu,  Mail  Today  and  the  Indian  Express  on  issues  such  as  climate  change,  non-­‐traditional  security,  radicalism,  BRICS,  and  development  policy  apart  from  cybersecurity  and  Internet  governance.    His  latest  published  work  includes,  “Attitudes  to  Water  in  South  Asia,”  a  joint  ORF-­‐Chatham  House  Report;  “A  Long  Term  Vision  for  BRICS,”  a  comprehensive  vision  document  submitted  to  the  BRICS  Think  Tanks  Council;  "The  ITU  and  Unbundling  Internet  Governance:  An  Indian  Perspective,"  for  the  Council  on  Foreign  Relations;  a  joint  research  project  between  ORF  and  the  Heritage  Foundation,  “Indo-­‐U.S.  Cooperation  on  Internet  Governance  and  Cyber  Security;”  and  a  paper  on  “The  Shifting  Digital  Pivot:  Time  for  Smart  Multilateralism”  for  Digital  Debates.    

   

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John  E.  Savage  Professorial  Fellow,  EastWest  Institute;    An  Wang  Professor  of  Computer  Science,  Brown  University    Dr.  John  E.  Savage  is  the  An  Wang  Professor  of  Computer  Science  at  Brown  University.  He  earned  his  PhD  in  Electrical  Engineering  at  MIT  and  joined  Bell  Laboratories  in  1965  and  the  faculty  of  the  Division  of  Engineering  at  Brown  University  in  1967.  In  1979  he  co-­‐founded  the  Department  of  Computer  Science  at  Brown  and  served  as  its  second  chair.  He  has  done  research  on  coding,  communication  theory,  cognitive  science,  circuit  complexity,  space-­‐time  and  area-­‐time  tradeoffs  for  serial  and  parallel  computation,  algorithms  for  scientific  computing,  memory  management  for  multicore  chips,  and  the  probabilistic  analysis  of  nanowire  crossbars.  His  current  interests  include  the  policy  and  technology  dimensions  of  cybersecurity.  He  is  the  author  or  co-­‐author  of  three  books  and  more  than  90  research  publications.  He  is  the  recipient  of  a  Fulbright-­‐Hays  Research  Award  and  is  a  Fellow  of  AAAS,  ACM  and  the  John  Simon  Guggenheim  Foundation,  and  a  Life  Fellow  of  IEEE.  He  served  as  Jefferson  Science  Fellow  in  the  Bureau  of  Intelligence  and  Research  of  the  U.S.  Department  of  State  from  2009  to  2010.  He  is  a  Professorial  Fellow  of  the  EastWest  Institute  and  a  member  of  the  IEEE  Experts  in  Technology  and  Policy  Forum  on  Internet  Governance,  Cybersecurity  and  Privacy.    

Joanna  Świątkowska  Programme  Director  of  CYBERSEC  and  Senior  Research  Fellow,  Cybersecurity,  Kosciuszko  Institute    Joanna  Świątkowska  is  the  Senior  Research  Fellow  for  Cybersecurity  of  the  Kosciuszko  Institute  and  the  Programme  Director  of  CYBERSEC.  She  is  the  Chief  Editor  of  the  new  quarterly  European  Cybersecurity  Journal.  She  has  been  involved  in  numerous  high  profiled  national  and  international  cybersecurity  initiatives.  She  often  cooperates  with  Polish  public  institutions,  including  among  others  the  Polish  Presidential  National  Bureau  of  Security  (NBS).  In  the  framework  of  the  National  Forum  of  Security  organized  by  NBS,  she  contributed  to  the  cyber  doctrine  of  Poland.    She  also  advised  the  Supreme  Audit  Office  in  terms  of  cybersecurity  control  in  Poland.  She  took  part  as  an  expert  in  the  Sino-­‐European  Cyber  Dialogue  held  in  Geneva  and  Beijing  in  2014.  She  is  the  author  of  numerous  articles,  reports  and  analyses  concerning  cybersecurity,  such  as  a  recently  published  report  on  critical  infrastructure  cybersecurity  in  Poland.  She  defended  her  doctoral  dissertation  in  the  field  of  political  science.    She  has  been  selected  for  the  U.S.  Department  of  State's  International  Visitor  Leadership  Program  (IVLP)  on  "Cyber  Security  and  Government  Interoperability"  taking  place  in  2016.    

   

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