May 19, 2013
8:09 PM
Go to Newsdesk Home. facts faculty contact
Experts and Speakers. media University Publications
newsdesk
other news
Culture
Science & Technology
Society
Undergraduate Expericence
University Initiatives
Release Archives

Maryland Remains a Top School for Entrepreneurially-Minded Students

New NIH Grant to Advance Joint UMD & UMB Brain Surgery Robot Development

TerpVision7 Offers Compelling Stories About the University of Maryland

New UMD Poll Shows Israelis Doubt Benefit from Gaza Conflict

Maryland in News

In This Week's News
November 2012

Maryland moving to Big Ten (Washington Post)

Move to Big Ten a defining one for President Wallace Loh (Baltimore Sun)


UMD, UMB venture to focus on patient data research (Baltimore Business Journal)





University Initiatives

E-mail this article For Immediate Release
October 19, 2009
Contacts: Carrie Handwerker, 301-405-5833 or chand@rhsmith.umd.edu

First Gordon Prize in Managing Cybersecurity Resources Awarded

 
Lawrence A. Gordon is the Robert H. Smith School's Ernst & Young Alumni Professor of Managerial Accounting and Information Assurance.
  Lawrence A. Gordon is the Robert H. Smith School's Ernst & Young Alumni Professor of Managerial Accounting and Information Assurance.
College Park, Md. -- The first $1000.00 Gordon Prize in Managing Cybersecurity Resources goes for an essay written by researchers from Harvard and Dresden, Germany. Maryland's Robert H. Smith School of Business announced the winner October 14. The essay contest asked competitors to offer innovative solutions that show how to allocate resources that protect personal and sensitive data on computers and online. Rainer Böhme, of the Institute of Systems Architecture at Technische Universität Dresden in Germany, and Tyler Moore, of the Center for Research on Computation and Society at Harvard University, won for their essay titled "The Iterated Weakest Link." The competition and prize is named for pioneering cybersecurity expert Lawrence A. Gordon, the Smith School's Ernst & Young Alumni Professor of Managerial Accounting and Information Assurance.

"The entries we received represented excellent insight on how individuals, organizations and government can effectively manage cybersecurity resources," said Gordon. "It's so important to continually reassess the most effective investments to guard against cyber threats and vulnerabilities because the interconnectedness of technology means that any attack could cripple an organization. The winning essay analyzes an innovative wait-and-see approach on when and how to invest in information security."

 
Rainer Böhme, of the Institute of Systems Architecture at Technische Universität Dresden in Germany."  
In their winning essay, Böhme and Moore say that by waiting for hackers to strike the weakest link in an information system, the company ends up investing in the most needed area, and hence achieves a higher overall return on their information security investments. The team hatched the idea behind their winning essay on a bus ride from Dartmouth to Boston in the summer of 2008.

Böhme received a Ph.D. in computer science from Technische Universität Dresden and is currently a post-doctoral researcher at the International Computer Science Institute, Berkeley. His research interests include economics of privacy and information security, steganography and steganalysis, multimedia forensics, and privacy-enhancing technologies.

Moore received a Ph.D. in computer science from the University of Cambridge, St John's College and is currently a postdoctoral research fellow at the Center for Research on Computation and Society (CRCS) at Harvard University. His research at CRCS focuses on the economics of information security, the study of electronic crime and the development of policy for strengthening security. Additional research interests include decentralized network security, critical infrastructure protection, and digital forensics.

Tyler Moore of the Center for Research on Computation and Society (CRCS) at Harvard University.
 
Tyler Moore of the Center for Research on Computation and Society (CRCS) at Harvard University.  

The Gordon Prize is offered yearly and the competition is open to students, faculty, and information security professionals in both the public and private sector. Essays are evaluated on their ability to provide and describe a clear, innovative solution to the problem associated with managing cybersecurity resources.

Gordon is committed to raising awareness of the issue of cybersecurity and its importance to business and government leaders. In 2003 he and two other colleagues at the University of Maryland instituted the Smith School's annual Cybersecurity Forum, now in its sixth year, to bring together the rich interchange of ideas that can only occur when people from many academic backgrounds and industries gather. He sees the Gordon Prize as another way of encouraging practitioners and theoreticians alike to approach the problem of cybersecurity in a multi-disciplinary way.


About the University of Maryland's
Robert H. Smith School of Business

The Robert H. Smith School of Business is an internationally recognized leader in management education and research. One of 13 colleges and schools at the University of Maryland, College Park, the Smith School offers undergraduate, full-time and part-time MBA, executive MBA, executive MS, PhD and executive education programs, as well as outreach services to the corporate community. The school offers its degree, custom and certification programs in learning locations in North America and Asia.

About the University of Maryland

From its pre-Civil War roots as Maryland's first agricultural college and one of America's original land grant institutions, the University of Maryland today is the flagship campus of the University System of Maryland and one of the nation's preeminent public research universities. Ranked No. 18 by U.S. News & World Report, it also has 32 academic programs in the Top 10 and 86 in the Top 25. The current faculty includes three Nobel Laureates, six Pulitzer Prize winners, 42 members of the National Academies of Science, a three-time Emmy Award winner, and scores of Fulbright scholars. Maryland is committed to excellence as the state's premier center of research and graduate education and the institution of choice for undergraduate students of exceptional ability and promise. For more information about the University of Maryland, visit www.umd.edu.

University of Maryland
Where is the University of Maryland?


09183View Printer Friendly Version


dotsInformation provided by the Office of University Communications
Email University Communications at emailum@umd.edu