European Cybersecurity Perspectives
other
Ham, J. van der
Groot, S.
Wilson, S.
Bernstein, D.J.
Krezmien, J.
Laethem, B. van
Jansen, R.
Boeke, S.
Planqué, S.
Lom, M. van
Niemantsverdrie, J.
Cornelisse, R.
Bijlenga, N.
Fransen, F.
Kerkdijk, R.
Seepers, R.M.
Ingenhoes, G.
Speelman, F.
Schaffner, C.
Alexander, P.
Aarsen, J. van
Helder, J.
Os, R. van
Richdale, K.
Huttner, B.
Kooning, L.
Doer, C.
Pontier, M.
Mak, M.
Cappers, B.
Mengerink, J.
Pasch, J. van de
Oosterwijk, S.
Blokker,J.
Groot, S.
Wilson, S.
Bernstein, D.J.
Krezmien, J.
Laethem, B. van
Jansen, R.
Boeke, S.
Planqué, S.
Lom, M. van
Niemantsverdrie, J.
Cornelisse, R.
Bijlenga, N.
Fransen, F.
Kerkdijk, R.
Seepers, R.M.
Ingenhoes, G.
Speelman, F.
Schaffner, C.
Alexander, P.
Aarsen, J. van
Helder, J.
Os, R. van
Richdale, K.
Huttner, B.
Kooning, L.
Doer, C.
Pontier, M.
Mak, M.
Cappers, B.
Mengerink, J.
Pasch, J. van de
Oosterwijk, S.
Blokker,J.
2018 is a difficult year to summarize for Infosec. After the initial flurry of activity around Spectre and Meltdown in the beginning of January, we ended the year with global supply chain concerns brought about by the Super Micro story. Throughout the year we saw the geopolitical dilemmas of 2018 manifest in cyber security issues. Technology giants like Facebook and Google had a security reckoning. However in pure scariness the medical data breaches of MyHeritage (DNA) and MyFitnessPal (health) rank higher. The Starwood Marriot Hotel breach made every travelling executive nervous for the rest of the year, but probably not as nervous as the incident of CEO Fraud at Pathé. In an effort to alleviate some of that impact we are proud to publish the 6th European Cyber Security Perspectives (ECSP) report. The 2019 issue is filled with great articles from our partners ranging from government, universities and private companies. Special thanks goes out to all the partners who have submitted an article for the 6th edition of the ECSP. Also huge hugs to first
time authors from de Piratenpartij, de Volksbank, Leiden University, University of Illinois, Hack in the Box and QuSoft. If IoT was the buzzword in 2017 then Artificial Intelligence (AI) was most definitely in 2018. AI and security seem to be intertwined and that is why you will find several articles about AI in this issue. This year the organization of Hack in the Box created a challenge which you can find at the bottom of the centerfold. There are great prizes involved so make sure to try your luck.
time authors from de Piratenpartij, de Volksbank, Leiden University, University of Illinois, Hack in the Box and QuSoft. If IoT was the buzzword in 2017 then Artificial Intelligence (AI) was most definitely in 2018. AI and security seem to be intertwined and that is why you will find several articles about AI in this issue. This year the organization of Hack in the Box created a challenge which you can find at the bottom of the centerfold. There are great prizes involved so make sure to try your luck.
TNO Identifier
862477
Source
ECSP, 6
Publisher
TNO
Place of publication
Den Haag