Abstracts

 

So you think you know AI?
Bridget Kenyon, CISCO, Shared Services Connected Ltd

A topical run-through of the latest developments and news in AI, with a focus on cyber security and curiosity.

 

How to use behavioural science to influence cybersecurity behaviours
Dr Inka Karppinen, Chartered cyberpsychologist and mixed methods researcher, UCL

Most of us have been there: created easy-to-hack passwords, wrote passwords down into a notebook and still forgotten them. Existing cyber security awareness campaigns have focused on various dos and don’ts. Organisations have added layers of security to stop us from being productive humans, to which we respond by creating mental and physical shortcuts that are, in fact, harmful to staying safe online. Raising security awareness by ‘fear’ appeals has done us little good. Are we beyond caring? Have we accepted that there is nothing we can do? Can we help people to change their cyber security behaviours? In this session, Inka sheds light on one of the most important aspects of cyber risk – the human factor. She will explore how we can target our approach to human cyber risk management and how behavioural science can help us tailor our security awareness and training efforts.,

Tom Wilson, CISO, Imperial College London

If you want your community to support your cyber security strategy and assist you with mitigating your cyber security risks, it is crucial that you consult them along the way. Improving working relationships between ICT and your community can significantly bolster your rollout plans and adoption of technology and processes that will strengthen your cyber security posture.  This presentation will cover how Imperial College London have been working to achieve this