Showing posts with label cici. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cici. Show all posts

Monday, April 18, 2022

NSF Announces CICI Program Solicitation

NSF’s Office of Advanced Cyberinfrastructure recently announced solicitation 22-581 in the Cybersecurity Innovation for Cyberinfrastructure program. Proposals, due June 27, are solicited in three areas:

  • Usable and Collaborative Security for Science (UCSS)
  • Reference Scientific Security Datasets (RSSD)
  • Transition to Cyberinfrastructure Resilience (TCR)

NSF is hosting a webinar covering the objectives of the CICI program on April 27th at 2 PM Eastern. During the 90-minute webinar, Program Director Robert Beverly will discuss the program and answer questions. The presentation portion of the webinar will be recorded and posted on the CICI program website. Please register to attend.

As a reminder, you can find resources for including Trusted CI in your proposal on our website.

Monday, November 28, 2016

CCoE Webinar Dec. 12th 11am EDT: CICI Regional Cybersecurity Collaboration projects

Our last webinar for the year will be a group presentation on the CICI Regional Cybersecurity Collaboration projects, on December 12th at 11am (EDT). More detailed information about the individual projects is listed below.

The presenters and project names are:
  • Xinwen Fu, New England Cybersecurity Operation and Research Center (CORE)
  • James Joshi & Brian Stengel, SAC-PA: Towards Security Assured Cyberinfrastructure in Pennsylvania
  • Jaroslav Flidr, Substrate for Cybersecurity Education; a Platform for Training, Research and Experimentation (SCEPTRE)
  • Jill Gemmill, SouthEast SciEntific Cybersecurity for University REsearch (SouthEast SECURE)
Anita Nikolich from NSF will provide an introduction to the NSF CICI program.

Please register here. Be sure to check spam/junk folder for registration confirmation with attached calendar file.

More information about this presentation is on the event page.

Presentations are recorded and include time for questions with the audience.

Join CTSC's discuss mailing list for information about upcoming events. To submit topics or requests to present, contact us here. Archived presentations are available on our site under "Past Events."

New England Cybersecurity Operation and Research Center (CORE)


CORE Project Web Site

Presenter: Xinwen Fu (University of Massachusetts Lowell)

The New England Cybersecurity Operation and Research Center (CORE) is a collaboration between cybersecurity researchers and networking experts from the University of Massachusetts Lowell, and Information Technology (IT) support personnel and leadership from the Office of the President of University of Massachusetts (UMass), who work together to improve the security of under-resourced institutions in New England and providing a model of a regional approach to cybersecurity. The researchers have established an open cybersecurity program at UMass, which guides customers through a sequence of steps and selects security controls and technologies from both proprietary solutions and free open source solutions, considering the budget of the institution or enterprise that wants to protect their assets. This project also performs research on emerging threats, trends and defense based on the collected data.

SAC-PA: Towards Security Assured Cyberinfrastructure in Pennsylvania 

Presenters: James Joshi & Brian Stengel (University of Pittsburgh)

Cybersecurity is a growing concern for individuals, communities, nations and the world. Increasing cyberattacks make cybersecurity a critical national security concern. Information technology provides tremendous opportunities to accelerate data-driven scientific research and education. Increasing cybersecurity problems can adversely impact the research and its economic and social benefits if our cyberinfrastructure that supports scientific research and education is not well protected. Beyond innovative cybersecurity solutions, it is critical to establish structured and effective practices and better collaboration among various stakeholders to share cybersecurity resources, expertise and information. This project focuses on establishing a regional collaboration and partnership within the state of Pennsylvania, referred to as SAC-PA. SAC-PA will provide critical support to smaller academic institutions (schools and colleges, etc.) including resource constrained regional institutions that serve under-represented groups, females and high school teachers and students. It will establish a collaboration and partnership framework to enable concerted activities promoting the use of effective cybersecurity techniques and practice of security-assured cyberinfrastructure. While enhancing the cybersecurity posture of PA, SAC-PA will provide a regional cybersecurity collaboration and partnership model that can be adopted by other regions, or be extended for national level collaborations. The SAC-PA project will include participation from the public-private sectors and academic institutions in PA in the following key activities: (i) developing and delivering three regional workshops in Pittsburgh to bring together various regional stakeholders from scientific research related communities with cyberinfrastructure or cybersecurity resources to better understand the regional capabilities; explore existing and emerging cybersecurity challenges/solutions; and devise collaboration and partnerships to enable concerted cybersecurity activities to promote the use of effective cybersecurity techniques and practices; (ii) collaboratively developing training/awareness materials based on the needs and capabilities identified in the workshops, and sharing these extensively with regional partners and beyond through various channels; and (iii) establishing regional partnerships and a shared repository of cybersecurity resources/capabilities to facilitate collaborative and concerted efforts towards protecting scientific cyberinfrastructures.

Substrate for Cybersecurity Education; a Platform for Training, Research and Experimentation (SCEPTRE) 

Presenter: Jaroslav Flidr (The George Washington University)

In collaboration with the Michigan Cyber Range (MCR) facility operated by Merit Network, and the Cyber Academy operated by the College of Professional Studies (CPS) at the George Washington University, the project proposes to establish and deploy an open and flexible technology platform for broad-context cybersecurity education and hands-on training. Initially, the platform will be used in developing and delivering a credit bearing Practicum (2 credit hours) that addresses “Intrusion Detection and Remediation.” The course will be transferable toward the undergraduate certificate in Protection and Defense of Computer Networks, which is part of the Bachelor’s degree completion in cybersecurity. The practicum is a hands-on training that will cover a broad range of network intrusion, prevention, and detection techniques such as implementation and testing of IDS security plans, security monitoring, intrusion detection, alarm management, analysis of events and trends, and vulnerability management. The program will utilize a high-performance, flexible environment built on Cisco’s UCS hardware platform with a modified OpenStack framework. This multi-tenant system, originally developed under an NSF grant, will facilitate the full integration of the Cyber Academy with the MCR resources. Thanks to its virtual nature and its tight coupling with physical cyberinfrastructure components such as HPC, cluster storage arrays, public and private clouds, 100G optical networks, and a wide variety of SDN technologies, the system will be able to deploy nearly any cybersecurity scenario, on demand. The program will start enrolling students immediately after making the platform operational.

Collaborative Research: CICI: Regional: SouthEast SciEntific Cybersecurity for University REsearch (SouthEast SECURE)

Presenter: Jill Gemmill (Clemson)

The SouthEast SciEntific Cybersecurity for University REsearch (SECURE) project helps protect the National Science Foundation's investments in scientific research while providing scientists with tools to safeguard intellectual property and ensure data integrity. The project team provides education, training, and selected cybersecurity services to NSF-funded researchers across the Southeast. The team is multidisciplinary, comprised of cybersecurity experts (both research and practitioner), scientists, and experts in communication. Team members are located in South Carolina, Alabama and Mississippi, with strong representation from Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCU). This program raises investigators' awareness of their essential role in creating a secure and trustworthy cyberspace and offers concrete assistance in risk assessment, vulnerability testing, and mitigation tailored to NSF-funded scientists? workflow and program size. Through past collaborations, the team is well positioned to leverage both national and regional cybersecurity organizations and programs to effectively reach the target audience.

SouthEast SECURE impacts the region by raising cybersecurity awareness; providing concise training, assessment, tools and one-on-one help; and assisting in preparation of select cybersecurity metrics. Student interns are conducting many of these activities by means of practicum-based deployment and support, thus developing capabilities in the next generation of cyber professionals. An online survey of NSF-funded investigators in the region will be conducted to learn about their primary cybersecurity challenges and concerns. Training is then tailored to provide concrete and practical assistance in how to do right-sized risk assessment and mitigation. A "toolkit" is provided to test and validate local cybersecurity, and measures of cybersecurity are created and field-tested. The team's approach facilitates communication between research faculty and university IT/Data Security staff. A long-term goal is building communities with common interests in cybersecurity and a commitment to helping others; and building connections with other regions and with national centers and programs.
 

Friday, February 5, 2016

CTSC Collaboration with CICI Projects

NSF has released the 2016 Cybersecurity Innovation for Cyberinfrastructure (CICI) solicitation. As the Cybersecurity Center of Excellence (CCoE) funded under the 2015 CICI solicitation, CTSC is undertaking the following activities on which we invite current and proposed CICI projects to collaborate:

  • Situational Awareness: As a CCoE, we will formalize the community notification process we have already begun under CTSC and provide a Cybersecurity Situational Awareness service for the NSF community. We will distribute vulnerability and other cybersecurity information to the NSF community, tailored for cyberinfrastructure, and CICI projects are welcome to disseminate our notifications to their communities and contribute to the information.
  • Cybersecurity Program Guide: The Guide to Developing Cybersecurity Programs for NSF Science and Engineering Projects is available to help guide you in working with NSF projects in establishing cybersecurity programs.
  • Training: CTSC has developed training materials tailored for the NSF community that we encourage you to use. We can also provide training ourselves as our schedule and travel budget allows.
  • Monthly Online Webinars and Chats: As a CCoE, we will host monthly online webinars and chats (similar to the IAM Online series hosted by InCommon). We are happy to invite CICI awardees to present their work.
  • Best practices on Reviews and Engagements: For Regional Cybersecurity Collaborations we are happy to share our experiences and lessons learned in collaborating with NSF projects to address their cybersecurity challenges. Lessons to-date can be found in our reports to NSF.
If you have questions on these topics or other suggestions for collaboration with your existing or proposed CICI project, please contact us.