The U.S. National Science Foundation has awarded Trusted CI, the NSF Cybersecurity Center of Excellence, a five-year, $6-million per-year award to run through September 2029. Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab) will now serve as Trusted CI’s central steward.
Trusted CI empowers trustworthy discovery and innovation funded by NSF by partnering with cyberinfrastructure (CI) operators to build and maintain effective cybersecurity programs that secure the progress of NSF-funded research. The center started in 2012 and consists of a multi-institutional, cross-functional team that addresses the complex challenges facing the NSF’s cyberinfrastructure research ecosystem.
Showing posts with label news. Show all posts
Showing posts with label news. Show all posts
Thursday, October 3, 2024
Cybersecurity Center of Excellence Receives Five-Year, $6M/Year Award From NSF
Read more in the press release.
To learn more about the Trusted CI Framework, the NSF Cybersecurity Summit, regional Summits, and Trusted CI’s other activities and resources, please read this expanded announcement and learn more on expanded announcement.
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Thursday, November 12, 2020
Thank you to Trusted CI alumni
Trusted CI, the NSF Cybersecurity Center of Excellence, has relied on expertise from its staff, multiple internationally recognized institutions, its advisory committee, and its collaboration with numerous NSF-funded research organizations to address the ongoing cybersecurity challenges for higher education and high-performance computing scientific research. We also want to thank our alumni, who made significant contributions to our mission. We wish them the best in their ongoing endeavors.
Go to Trusted CI alumni to see some of the contributions that alumni have made. (Some of our alumni have opted not to appear on a public website.)
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Thursday, March 22, 2018
New name, same mission
Dear friends of CTSC,
We're writing to announce that the Center for Trustworthy Scientific Cyberinfrastructure (CTSC) is becoming Trusted CI, the NSF Cybersecurity Center of Excellence.
Why are we making this change? While it clearly conveyed our mission, our initial name was a mouthful -- and, with the added CCoE designation, we found that people struggled to remember it. Trusted CI will build better name recognition, through consistent branding across our website (trustedci.org) and social media (@TrustedCI).
The new name still emphasizes what we're about: Achieving the NSF goal of creating high-quality, trusted cyberinfrastructure (CI) that supports high-quality, trusted science. It will also make it easier for you to remember how to get help for your NSF CI projects: Email ask@trustedci.org (be sure to identify which NSF project your query relates to).
As we roll out the new branding this spring, we'd like to extend an active invitation to engage our services. From quick questions to collaborative engagements lasting months, Trusted CI tackles challenges of all sizes.
We're happy to assist with anything related to cybersecurity for NSF CI projects, and we're focused on tailored solutions that impact your work as little as possible. And now all you have to remember is Trusted CI!
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Friday, March 25, 2016
ScienceNode on "What does security mean in science today?"
ScienceNode ran an article earlier this week "What does security mean in science today?" featuring a virtual panel with Anita Nikolich (NSF), Tim Minick (Gemini), Steve Barnet (IceCube), and Abe Singer (LIGO).
In case you missed it, there was also an interview earlier this month with Anita Nikolich.
We encourage readers with ideas for other stories regarding cybersecurity and science to contact the ScienceNode editors.
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Friday, January 15, 2016
CTSC funded as the NSF Cybersecurity Center of Excellence
We're pleased to announce that CTSC has been funded for the next three years as the NSF Cybersecurity Center of Excellence. Ensuring scientific computing remains trustworthy and uncorrupted is essential in protecting the nation’s science. In its role as a Cybersecurity Center of Excellence, the CTSC will provide readily available cybersecurity services tailored to the NSF science community.
These resources will include leadership and coordination across organizations, and education and training to expand the pool of available cybersecurity expertise.
"NSF-funded cyberinfrastructure presents unique challenges for operational security personnel and impacts other important areas of research affecting society, including ocean sciences, natural hazards, engineering, biology and physics," said Anita Nikolich, cybersecurity program director at the NSF's advanced cyberinfrastructure division. "Organizations that host cyberinfrastructure must find the right balance of security, privacy and usability while maintaining an environment in which data are openly shared. Many research organizations lack expertise in technical and policy security and could benefit from an independent, shared security resource pool."
The CTSC will collaborate directly with NSF-funded research organizations to address their cybersecurity challenges and provide forums for cybersecurity collaboration across organizations. For example, Jim Basney of the National Center for Supercomputing Applications will lead CTSC support activities on the topic of identity and access management for research organizations. The CTSC will also convene an annual NSF Cybersecurity Summit, led by James A. Marsteller, security officer at the Pittsburgh Supercomputing Center, to share experiences, provide training and discuss cybersecurity challenges.
"Cybersecurity is no longer solely a technical matter -- it's a critical part of any organization’s risk management," said Von Welch, director of IU's Center for Applied Cybersecurity Research. "Addressing the risks to computational science requires a comprehensive understanding of research and the threats it faces. Many of these threats are those faced by any other organization on the Internet, but others are unique to the science community with its collaborative nature and use of high-end information technology and cyberinfrastructure."
An example of a safeguard the CTSC will promote is software assurance, with experienced, respected names in that field such as Barton Miller, a professor at the University of Wisconsin-Madison offering expertise to reduce the risks of vulnerabilities and breaches for researchers.
Additionally, the CTSC will collaborate with the U.S. Department of Energy’s Energy Science Network, or ESnet, to develop a threat profile for open science.
"The Department of Energy and NSF enable scientific discovery in a range of domains critical to our nation's future," said Greg Bell, director for ESnet and division director at the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. "Working together to understand cybersecurity threat models shared by these collaborations is an important step forward for the two agencies, and ESnet is delighted to be collaborating on this effort."
News coverage:
These resources will include leadership and coordination across organizations, and education and training to expand the pool of available cybersecurity expertise.
"NSF-funded cyberinfrastructure presents unique challenges for operational security personnel and impacts other important areas of research affecting society, including ocean sciences, natural hazards, engineering, biology and physics," said Anita Nikolich, cybersecurity program director at the NSF's advanced cyberinfrastructure division. "Organizations that host cyberinfrastructure must find the right balance of security, privacy and usability while maintaining an environment in which data are openly shared. Many research organizations lack expertise in technical and policy security and could benefit from an independent, shared security resource pool."
The CTSC will collaborate directly with NSF-funded research organizations to address their cybersecurity challenges and provide forums for cybersecurity collaboration across organizations. For example, Jim Basney of the National Center for Supercomputing Applications will lead CTSC support activities on the topic of identity and access management for research organizations. The CTSC will also convene an annual NSF Cybersecurity Summit, led by James A. Marsteller, security officer at the Pittsburgh Supercomputing Center, to share experiences, provide training and discuss cybersecurity challenges.
"Cybersecurity is no longer solely a technical matter -- it's a critical part of any organization’s risk management," said Von Welch, director of IU's Center for Applied Cybersecurity Research. "Addressing the risks to computational science requires a comprehensive understanding of research and the threats it faces. Many of these threats are those faced by any other organization on the Internet, but others are unique to the science community with its collaborative nature and use of high-end information technology and cyberinfrastructure."
An example of a safeguard the CTSC will promote is software assurance, with experienced, respected names in that field such as Barton Miller, a professor at the University of Wisconsin-Madison offering expertise to reduce the risks of vulnerabilities and breaches for researchers.
Additionally, the CTSC will collaborate with the U.S. Department of Energy’s Energy Science Network, or ESnet, to develop a threat profile for open science.
"The Department of Energy and NSF enable scientific discovery in a range of domains critical to our nation's future," said Greg Bell, director for ESnet and division director at the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. "Working together to understand cybersecurity threat models shared by these collaborations is an important step forward for the two agencies, and ESnet is delighted to be collaborating on this effort."
News coverage:
- IU leads $5 million collaborative grant for NSF-funded Cybersecurity Center of Excellence (IU release) (Inside IU)
- UW-Madison part of $5 million grant to safeguard NSF research (UW-Madison release)
- $5-million Collaborative Grant Establishes NSF-funded Cybersecurity Center of Excellence (PSC release)
- $5M Collaborative Grant Establishes NSF-Funded Cybersecurity Center of Excellence (http://myinforms.com/)
- IU to Lead $5M Cybersecurity Center (insideindianabusiness.com)
- Center for Trustworthy Scientific Cyberinfrastructure to provide Cybersecurity Services Tailored to NSF Community (Scientific Computing)
- Indiana University gets $5M to lead cybersecurity center (Lexington Herald Leader)
- Indiana University gets $5M to lead cybersecurity center (Herald Times)
- Indiana University To Lead Cybersecurity Collaboration (WFYI)
- Pittsburgh Supercomputing Center part of group receiving $5M National Science Foundation grant (Pittsburgh Business Times)
- IU Receives $5 Million For Cybersecurity (Indiana Public Media)
- NSF on Twitter
- IU nets $5M grant for NSF cybersecurity initiative (ecampusnews.com)
- NCSA CyberSecurity Team Awarded NSF Grants (HPCWire)
- UW Included In Cybersecurity Grant To Protect Scientific Data (Wisconsin Public Radio)
- NSF Awards $5M to Establish Cyber Center; Anita Nikolich Comments (executivegov.com)
- NSF Gives $5 Million Boost to Cybersecurity Research (sourceforge.net)
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