[Cyber Security reading group] Meeting #3

Sethi A. Aneesha.Sethi at soton.ac.uk
Thu Nov 30 13:34:32 GMT 2017


Hi all,

Just a reminder for tomorrow’s talk:

Where: B59 Zepler building, Room 4240 (Level 4, Demo room)
When: Friday, December 1st, 2017
Time: 13:00 - 14:00
*Coffee and biscuits will be provided*

Topic: Cyber-Physical Security - Where to Draw the line?
Abstract: Advances in additive manufacturing have had a disruptive influence to the conventional manufacturing process by bringing manufacturing to the hands of the customer and shortening the supply chain. The customer can customise and manufacture any 3D object using additive manufacturing without leaving their once, lab or home. This paradigm shift in manufacturing raised concerns about the intellectual property rights of 3D objects.
This work presents a framework for provenance of 3D objects that investigates the transition of security properties from digital 3D objects to 3D printed objects because of the absence of such mechanisms. A holistic security view of additive manufacturing process by presenting an additive manufacturing security reference model and a tool to bench- mark security of additive manufacturing.

See you all there!

Regards
Aneesha


From: Aneesha Sethi <Aneesha.Sethi at soton.ac.uk>
Date: Tuesday, 28 November 2017 at 11:56
To: "Cyber-reading at ecs.soton.ac.uk" <Cyber-reading at ecs.soton.ac.uk>
Cc: Nawfal Al Hashimy <n.alhashimy at gmail.com>
Subject: Meeting #3

Hi all,

I’m happy to announce that our next talk will be on Friday by Nawfal Fadhel. Nawfal (Soon to be Dr. Nawfal) has just passed his PhD viva and would be giving a talk on his research. :D

Where: B59 Zepler building, Room 4240 (Level 4, Demo room)
When: Friday, December 1st, 2017
Time: 13:00 - 14:00
*Coffee and biscuits will be provided*

Topic: Cyber-Physical Security - Where to Draw the line?
Abstract: Advances in additive manufacturing have had a disruptive influence to the conventional manufacturing process by bringing manufacturing to the hands of the customer and shortening the supply chain. The customer can customise and manufacture any 3D object using additive manufacturing without leaving their once, lab or home. This paradigm shift in manufacturing raised concerns about the intellectual property rights of 3D objects.
This work presents a framework for provenance of 3D objects that investigates the transition of security properties from digital 3D objects to 3D printed objects because of the absence of such mechanisms. A holistic security view of additive manufacturing process by presenting an additive manufacturing security reference model and a tool to bench- mark security of additive manufacturing.

See you there!

Regards
Aneesha
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