[Stanford's ee380 class often has interesting talks.
This one sounds like it's by the Bad Guys :-)
There's a parking building nearby where the public can park after 4:00,
but construction has eaten most of the other parking lots.]

Subject: [CSL Colloq] Solving High Technology Crime * 4:15PM,
Wed Jan 22, 2003 in Gates B03
Date: Thu, 16 Jan 2003 22:34:55 -0800 (PST)


COMPUTER SYSTEMS LABORATORY COLLOQUIUM
4:15PM, Wednesday, Jan 22, 2003
NEC Auditorium, Gates Computer Science Building B03
http://ee380.stanford.edu[1]

Topic: Solving High Technology Crime
Academic Partnership in Crime Fighting

Speaker: Gregory S. Crabb
United States Postal Inspector
San Francisco Electronic Crimes Task Force

Other participants include:
Robert Rodriguez, Assistant Special Agent in Charge, United States Secret Service
Richard Perlotto, Cisco Systems
Chris Lalone, Network Security, eBay
Mike Miravalle, CEO, Dolphin Technologies
Fred Demma, Dolphon Technologyies

About the talk:

The San Francisco Electronic Crimes Task Force seeks to
engage
the academic community to help us address the technology
crimes
affecting our community, our corporate partners and law
enforcement. The crimes affecting our corporate partners include
computer hacking, intellectual property crimes (criminal
trademark and copyright infringement) and identity theft. These
crimes are costing the high technology community billions of
dollars and stunting the acceptance and growth of these
technologies to support our economy. Antiquated investigative
methods and poor individual accountability for Internet
communications are some of the greatest challenges facing law
enforcement. The solution to some of these challenges may lie
within the academic community.

The talk will focus on several brief case studies relating our
greatest challenges in fighting high technology crime. Each case
study will be presented by a law enforcement agent and/or
corporate partner of the task force.

About the speaker:

The San Francisco Electronic Crimes Task Force is a group of
Federal, state, local investigators and corporate partners, lead
by the U.S. Secret Service, focused on attacking high technology
crime affecting Bay Area companies, locally and globally. The
task force is part of the Secret Service's nation-wide network of
electronic crimes task forces, see http://www.ectaskforce.org[2].

Contact information:

San Francisco Electronic Crimes Task Force
345 Spear St
San Francisco, CA
(415) 744-9026

Acknowledgements:

Thanks to the Computer Forum[3] and to Professors Dan Boneh
and
John Mitchell for assistance in organizing this event.


Embedded Links:
[ 1 ] http://ee380.stanford.edu
[ 2 ] http://www.ectaskforce.org
[ 3 ] http://www-forum.stanford.edu

----- End forwarded message -----

Reply via email to