
June 2003 From Carnegie Mellon University Carnegie Mellon hosts Cyber Corps Job potential in information security PITTSBURGH--Carnegie Mellon University will host a symposium June 14-17 at the University Center designed to discuss the urgency of developing a larger information security talent pool, and the need for academia, government and the private sector to partner in securing the nation's many critical infrastructures.The symposium kicks off Sunday, June 15 with a keynote address by Howard Schmidt, director of security at eBay and former cybersecurity adviser to President Bush. He will discuss how the nation should be rethinking security. Other symposium panels include topics ranging from computer-related crime to the various opportunities available now for women and minorities interested in Information Security careers. More than 160 students from 22 universities, including Carnegie Mellon, will participate in the symposium and an accompanying job fair. The students are part of a new federal program designed to help colleges and universities train the next generation of information security professionals. Carnegie Mellon has received more than $4 million in grants through the National Science Foundation's (NSF) Federal Cyber Service program to award scholarships to students who study information security and enter government service for at least two years after graduation. The grants also enabled Carnegie Mellon to develop and offer an Information Security Capacity Building program to institutions serving large minority populations. "The program is critically important because it is producing security experts who will play a key role in helping protect the Federal government's information infrastructure in the coming years. The more schools that can develop these information security programs, the more students we can turn out with this kind of expertise," said Don McGillen, executive director of Carnegie Mellon's Center for Communications Security (C3S) and a program leader. The university gathered staff from engineering, public policy, computer science and the CERT Coordination Center and from other institutions designated as centers of excellence under the National Security Agency's Infosec Education and Training Program. Additional information about the symposium may be obtained by clicking on the "2003 CyberService/CyberCorps Student Workshop" link at www.ece.cmu.edu/C3S. |