In case you missed the above workshop at EDUCAUSE SPC (and you may well have missed it—the workshop filled up early, had a long wait list, and was almost standing room only), the slides from “Securing and Supporting Research Projects: Facilitation Design Patterns” are now available.
Presented by Michael Corn (CISO, UCSD) and Cyd Burrows-Schilling (Research Facilitator, UCSD), the workshop helped prepare security professionals to support sponsored research projects. It provided an overview of how research operates within Universities; taught facilitation skills for working with faculty; and provided guidance on how to develop a project specific security plan that meets the requirements of NSD, DoD, and other sponsoring organizations.
We were honored to have Professor Tanya Berger-Wolf from the University of Illinois at Chicago join us in person. The session with Professor Berger-Wolf was a highlight of the workshop, and helped attendees understand how cybersecurity professionals can work with researchers and learn to navigate the gap between the traditional top-down approach to security and the practicalities of everyday research lab infrastructures.
Claire Mizumoto, Director of Research IT Services at UCSD joined us remotely and gave a thought-provoking presentation on the hurdles researchers face in obtaining funding, preparing grants, and meeting the aggressive time demands of obtaining tenure.
Florence D. Hudson, who is Founder and CEO at FDHint, LLC and Special Adviser to our friends at Trusted CI, the NSF Cybersecurity Center of Excellence, gave an overview of three extremely useful tools: the NSF Cybersecurity Planning Guide, the Software Engineering Guide, and the Information Security Practice Principles. If you’re charged with providing cybersecurity for research projects of any size, these are pretty much required reading.
Vlad Grigorescu, Security Engineer at ESnet, led a deep dive into ScienceDMZ, which is an excellent network design pattern for data-intensive research projects.
We’re grateful to all our guests for their participation and incredibly useful information. If you need more information on any of the topics presented, contact us at rsoc@iu.edu.
The workshop was organized by the ResearchSOC project (researchsoc.iu.edu – NSF award 1840034).
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