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Professor Jill Slay and team at UniSA developed a tool to rapidly access massive amounts of electronic?
11-27-2012, 06:55 AM
Post: #1
Professor Jill Slay and team at UniSA developed a tool to rapidly access massive amounts of electronic?
evidence. Would such a tool be most useful to investigate what went wrong with Collins software ?

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11-27-2012, 07:03 AM
Post: #2
 
The tool could have been most useful to investigate what went wrong with Collins software .-------------------------Are you being compromised? Challenges of cyber communication in the 21st century.
Professor Jill Slay and Detective Senior Sergeant Barry Blundell
Wednesday 20 October 2010, 6.00pm
Mawson Centre Lecture Theatre
Mawson Centre, UniSA Mawson Lakes campus.
Information and Communications Technology (ICT) is an integral part of our daily lives. The growth in electronic communication and social media is nothing short of astounding. If Facebook were a country, it would now be the world's third largest. Google is such a common term in language use that in 2006 it was added to the Oxford Dictionary.

We use ICT to stay in contact, to obtain information, to conduct business and for financial and banking services. Companies are increasingly aware of the need to be connected online with customers. Government and business are also taking advantage of the opportunities for economic development that exist through increased use of information technology.

However, the rapid growth and development of ICT is matched by the rise of issues around cyber security. The complex issues around e-crime, internet fraud and scams and cyber-bullying present key challenges for all ICT users.

This public lecture presented by two experts in the area of cyber security, Detective Senior Sergeant Barry Blundell and Professor Jill Slay will challenge our thinking about how ICT impacts law enforcement, and how research is playing a pivotal role in enhancing security in today's cyber communication.

http://www.unisa.edu.au/knowledgeworks/l...ctober.asp Dr Jill Slay is Dean of Research in the Division of IT, Engineering and the Environment.

She is also Professor of Forensic Computing and leads the Information Assurance Group and its Forensic Computing Lab.


Currently, she carries out collaborative research in Forensic Computing, Information Assurance and Critical Infrastructure Protection with industry, State and Federal Government partners in Australia.

She has extensive teaching experience in the tertiary sector at undergraduate and postgraduate level and is currently co- supervising 11 PhD students with 5 others recently completed. She has personally supervised more than 40 cross-disciplinary honours and coursework masters students in their theses and projects.

She is an affiliate Professor at Idaho State University and is a Member of the Asian Advisory Board of the International Information Systems Security Certification Consortium of which she us a fellow.

Jill has published one book and more than 90 refereed book chapters, journal articles or research papers in forensic computing, information assurance, critical infrastructure protection, complex systems and education.

Professor Jill Slay

Position: Dean of Research:ITEE
Division/Portfolio: Division of Information Technology, Engineering and the Environment
School/Unit: Information Technology Engineering and the Environment Divisional Office
Campus: Mawson Lakes Campus

Office: F2-24, MC2-22
Telephone: +61 8 830 23840, +61 8 830 25757
Fax: +61 8 830 25785
Email: Jill.Slay@unisa.edu.au
URL for Business Card: http://people.unisa.edu.au/Jill.Slay
http://www.unisanet.unisa.edu.au/staff/H...=jill.slay

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