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30 Information Security Exchange Theatre Agenda


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Information Security Exchange Theatre Agenda Day One - Tuesday 23 April


10.30-11.30 ISO 22301 – Why it’s more than just disaster recovery ISO 22301 is the International Standard for Business Continuity Management. It was published in May 2012, superseding BS25999, the British Standard for business continuity. For those organisations with ISO 27001, there is already a requirement to think about business continuity, but how do you know it is effective, and in line with the needs of your business, suppliers and customers? ISO22301 attempts to bring these elements together and make it easier for the information specialist to prioritise not only DR, but all other information assets they are responsible for.


Speaker: Mike Edwards, Tutor, BSI


11.45-12.45 2012 DDoS attacks: Top 10 trends and truths The Internet powers almost every aspect of business operations today, from websites, email and ecommerce payments to behind-the-scenes data exchanges. During a distributed denial of service (DDoS) attack, the entire enterprise is at risk. Besides crippling sales and productivity and severing ties to suppliers and partners, DDoS attacks fuel doubts about a company’s stability. Blogs light up in minutes, becoming part of the Web’s permanent record. The damage to brand equity can be lasting and incalculable.


This session examines the major DDoS trends of 2012 and what to expect in 2013. Drawing on Neustar’s decade of experience in DDoS mitigation, plus the unique Internet views our enterprise services afford, this session seeks to separate truth from industry myth. 2012 was an eventful year across the DDoS landscape. The insights that are shared are meant to help you better prepare for 2013.


Speaker: Susan Warner, DDoS Product Specialist, Neustar 13.00-14.00 The changing face of security: Transforming authentication into a risk-based


approach The password is your claim to online identity. But not surprisingly, the static password is under siege from new and more advanced malware, and smash and grab attacks on password files and hashed password stores. In fact so many credentials have been harvested and are currently in the wild for sale that one-third of all attacks now involve the use of one of these stolen credentials. The traditional approach of lengthening and strengthening static passwords does no good. Issues hardware or software based one-time password tokens are not optimal to deploy in every scenario.


In this session, a new, practical approach to the age-old problem of static passwords is addressed, and the benefits this can bring to your organisation in terms of scalability, cost savings and enhanced security are addressed.


Speaker: Jeff Carpenter, Senior Product Specialist, RSA, The Security Division of EMC


14.15-15.15 Big Data for better security According to Gartner, by 2016, 40 percent of enterprises will actively analyse at least 10 terabytes of data for information security intelligence, up from less than three percent in 2011. Could this Big Data challenge also present a myriad of opportunities for the security teams? How could organisations look to gain unique and actionable security intelligence from Big Data and third-party applications delivered through the cloud, in order to improve threat detection, threat prevention and threat response? Join this Panel of IT Experts from HP Enterprise Security Products and Services and explore what the future could hold for you.


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