Adam Shostack co-authors new paper: “Lessons for Cybersecurity from the American Public Health System”
Every four years, the Computing
Research Association publishes a set of Quadrennial papers that
“explore areas and issues around computing
research with potential to address
national priorities. The white papers
attempt to portray a comprehensive picture
of the computing research field detailing
potential research directions, challenges,
and recommendations.”
I’m pleased to have helped draft one of these: Lessons for Cybersecurity from the American Public Health System.
I’m grateful to my co-authors: L. Jean Camp (Indiana University), Yi Ting Chua (University of Tulsa), Josiah Dykstra (Trail of Bits), Brian LaMacchia (FARCASTER Consulting Group) and Daniel Lopresti (Lehigh University). If you’re looking for a solid survey of the state of computing and public policy, the Quad papers are a great resource.
I’m pleased to have helped draft one of these: Lessons for Cybersecurity from the American Public Health System.
The United States needs national institutions and frameworks to systematically collect cybersecurity data, measure outcomes, and coordinate responses across government and private sectors, similar to how public health systems track and address disease outbreaks.
I’m grateful to my co-authors: L. Jean Camp (Indiana University), Yi Ting Chua (University of Tulsa), Josiah Dykstra (Trail of Bits), Brian LaMacchia (FARCASTER Consulting Group) and Daniel Lopresti (Lehigh University). If you’re looking for a solid survey of the state of computing and public policy, the Quad papers are a great resource.