New York 2015 Speakers

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September 9 – 10, 2015

Speakers #EWIcyber

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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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Keynote Speakers Scott Charney

Corporate Vice President, Trustworthy Computing, Microsoft

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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.

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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.

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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

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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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Speakers 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.

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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 2 Achievements (ISLA) Awards awarded by (ISC) , 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

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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

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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

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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

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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

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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)

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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. 3 Mike was chairman of M AAWG from January 2008 to January 2013 and now serves as 3 Chair Emeritus. M AAWG was the winner of the 2013 EWI Worldwide Cybersecurity 3 Award. As chairman of M AAWG 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

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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

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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

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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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EastWest Institute Global Cooperation in Cyberspace Initiative SUPPORTERS Microsoft

Huawei Technologies Palo Alto Networks

NXP Semiconductors Qihoo 360 Unisys CenturyLink PARTNERS IEEE Communications Society Munich Security Conference The Open Group The University of New South Wales

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Brussels

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