The Internet of Things (IoT) Security Trust Mark™ (STM) https://iotsecuritytrustmark.org is a third-party conformity assessment, certification and voluntary 'live' labelling scheme providing IoT users (consumers) with a recognisable level of assurance that IoT provider's (vendor/manufacturer) security claims about their product have been independently evaluated and conform with internationally established baseline security requirements. The talk will cover: History Key Tenets Reasons & Requirements Governance & Process International IoT Security Standards, Recommendations, Guidelines & Codes Alignment with IoT Security Trust Mark™ Baseline Requirements Next steps Biography Matt Tett is the Managing Director of Enex P/L. He is well known globally across industry and government as a very well connected, highly technical straight shooter. Effectively applying science to translating complex technology for the layperson, ensuring consumers receive what they are paying for. Matt is an Advisor and Subject Matter Expert (SME) for IoT Security Mark P/L who operate the global IoT Security Trust Mark™ (STM) Certification and voluntary labelling scheme. (www.iotsecuritytrustmark.org). He is the founder of the National Day of The Month (DOTM) club, which currently has over 3300 members from the information security industry. (www.dotm.com.au) Enex TestLab’ objective is to use science to keep tech vendors honest by rigorously testing their product claims and ensuring consumer requirements are met factually. (www.testlab.com.au), Enex TestLab is an independent ISO17025 accredited testing laboratory with a 30+ year history, RMIT university heritage, and ISO 9001 QMS Quality, ISO 27001 ISMS Security and ISO 45001 OH&S certifications. Matt is a current board director of Communications Alliance (www.commsalliance.com.au) and a former board director of the Internet Industry Association. He is also the current chair of IoT Alliance Australia (IoTAA) (www.iot.org.au) enabler Work Stream 3 (eWS-3) – Cyber Security and Network Resilience and sits on the IoTAA Executive Council. Matt is also a Director of eMetric P/L (T/AS Honesty Box™). (www.honestybox.io) He also serves on the Online Safety Consultative Working Group (OSCWG) for the Office of the eSafety Commissioner, the Communications Alliance Cyber Security Reference Panel (CSRP), the CSRP Fraud subgroup and the Communications Resilience Administration Industry Group (CRAIG), the Internet Australia Cyber Security SIG, and is a member of the research advisory committee for the Internet Commerce Security Laboratory at Federation University. He is a committee member participating in the development of Standards related to IT-042-00-01 – IoT and Related Technologies. Matt has a deep technical background in network and security systems and he holds the following security certifications in good standing for 17+ years: CISSP, CISM, CSEPS and CISA. He is a certified Government security advisor and retains State and Federal Government security clearances. He is also a judge for a number of industries, including the Commsday “Edison” Awards, IT Journo “Lizzies” Awards, InnovationAus Awards for Excellence, IoT Impact Awards and the Australian Women in Security Networking Awards. Email: [email protected] Event link: https://events.vtools.ieee.org/m/283348 Registration link: https://events.vtools.ieee.org/event/register/283348
This presentation aims to use an ongoing research project to explain how psychometric testing amplifies the relationship between data analytics and online learning.Since the advent of the COVID-pandemic, many of us have become acutely aware that learning under such crises cannot be expected to occur in the same pedagogical patterns as before. Time is proving that such pandemics are unpredictable and challenging events that disrupt the normal flow of business, and the learning processes in organisations and universities, affecting their operations and the health and well-being of their members. Learning becomes difficult under such crises because of the barriers hindering effective learning. Some of these obstacles are described well in the existing literature. For example, the lack of previous online learning experiences during a pandemic makes it challenging to draw on lessons learned or apply effective strategies that promote learning. In addition, a lack of solid technological solid pedagogical infrastructure and a poorly designed curriculum may prohibit effective learning. However, research does show that learning opportunities under such crises are possible when the instructional strategies follow sound educational practices. Speaker Bio Elspeth McKay PhD, Director - Cogniware Australia https://cogniware.com.au, gained her PhD in Computer Science and Information Systems from Deakin University, Geelong, Australia. Elspeth holds further qualifications in Instructional Design, Computer Education and Business Information Systems. Her research passion is to design effective eLearning resources for the education sector and industry training/reskilling programmes. Her Australian Research Council’s research investigated Government eTraining strategies. In addition, she develops Rasch model e-Learning tools that employ learning analytics. Her PhD supervision of international scholars includes Saudi Arabia, Malaysia, Jordan, South Africa, China, the Philippines. Enquiries and link Alan Harvey: [email protected]
Speaker: Simon Cowley Principal Cybersecurity Officer | Health Sector Assurance Digital Health Department of Health. Location: Virtual Webinar; abstract & registration details to follow This event is a collaboration between the IEEE Victorian Section Engineering in Medicine & Biology Society (EMBS), and the Society for Medical & Biological Engineering Victoria. More Information: [email protected]
Hello Everyone! IEEE Women in Engineering UniMelb would like to invite you to attend our event "Women in Empowerment" on 13th October at 6 pm. This event will have three speakers who will be speaking about career journeys in STEM and inspire us and many other women to pursue this career. "Let us choose for ourselves our path in life, and let us try to strew that path with flowers." - Emilie du Chatelet, mathematician, physicist and author. As said by Emilie, these women inspire many people around and have accomplished high in their careers in STEM. Please join us in hearing their inspiring career journey and learn more about STEM from them Link - https://unimelb.zoom.us/j/84327778845?pwd=TUtsZi9VM2Fyd0FSc2p3UjVoWU5Udz09 Meeting ID: 84327778845 Password: 234864 Download Flyer: Women Empowerment.pdf
Key elements of the Personal Computer emerged during the decade starting in 1974. . These included the computer mouse, icon-based desktops, network links, affordable mass storage, memory-mapped video displays. Through this decade the beginnings were seen first-hand by the presenter, Dr Harvey Cohen, starting in 1974, which he spent in the MIT AI Lab, and briefly in Silicon Valley where he encountered SMALLTALK and the Dynabook. Back in Australia In 1975 he constructed a Turtle robot, developed mainframe microprocessor cross assemblers for four emerging microprocessors. Using the very first generation of microcomputers he initiated the OZNAKI Project. which produced the LOGO related software for microcomputers, running initially on the Poly-88, arguably the earliest practical microcomputer. In 1978 he had extensive dealings with Jeff Raskin, an associate editor of IEEE Computer, who confided his plan to join Apple. At Apple Raskin initiated the development of the Macintosh, but before its release, Steve Jobs became the Macintosh lead. And then came the IBM branded microcomputer called the IBM PC, followed by the Microsoft DOS and Windows machine. The Zoom session will start at 10:45 am https://us02web.zoom.us/j/84185878704?pwd=cjRRVDJNTTdFQXl0cSs1WHRmTkc1dz09 Meeting ID: 841 8587 8704 Passcode: 847602