Fighting Cybercrime through Closer International Cooperation
[Update] Fighting cybercrime through closer international cooperation: read the summary of the discussions
[Update] View the photo gallery from the event
[Update] Follow the discussion live on Twitter via #theGIP
At the second Cybersecurity Day, on 30 March, you can learn how cybercrime is committed, combated, and prevented. Together with experts, engineers, and diplomats, you can discuss international cooperation in the fight against cybercrime in the context of preparations for the forthcoming 13th UN Congress on Crime Prevention and Criminal Justice (Doha, 12-19 April 2015). At the Cybersecurity Lab, you can learn the skills you need to increase your security in cyberspace. Join us for this useful and exciting cyber experience.
The event will take place at the Geneva Internet Platform, 7 bis, Avenue de la Paix, Geneva (2nd floor).
Programme
09.30–10.00 Welcome coffee
10.00‒10.15 Opening remarks
- Dr Michele Coduri, Deputy Head, Division for Security Policy, Federal Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Switzerland
- Dr Tereza Horejsova, Coordinator, Geneva Internet Platform
10.15‒11.15 Cybercrime challenges for law enforcement
Cybercriminals are often at the forefront of innovation. This presents particular challenges for law enforcement officials in the fight against cybercrime. This session will discuss how law enforcement tackles cybercrime and how international instruments are an essential enabler of their work.
Speakers:
- Tobias Bolliger, Deputy Head of Swiss Cybercrime Coordination Unit (CYCO), Swiss Federal Office of Police fedpol
- Michel Quillé, Executive President ‒ Forum International des Technologies de Sécurité and former Deputy Director of Europol
- Despoina Sareidaki, ICT Policy Analyst, ITU
- Volker Birk, CCC Switzerland
Moderator: Vladimir Radunović, Director Cybersecurity Programme, DiploFoundation
11.15‒11.30 Coffee break
11.30‒12.30 International framework for fighting cybercrime
The session will focus on how international cybercrime cooperation is improved by the Council of Europe’s Budapest Convention and other regional and global instruments.
Speakers:
- Alexander Seger, Head of Cybersecurity Programme, Council of Europe
- Prof. Solange Ghernaouti, University of Lausanne
- Jayantha Fernando, Director, ICT Agency of Sri Lanka (ICTA) (remotely)
- Claudio Peguero, Brigadier General, National Police, Dominican Republic (remotely)
Moderator: Dr Jovan Kurbalija, Head of the Geneva Internet Platform and Director of DiploFoundation
12.30 -13:00 Lunch refreshments
13.00–14.30 Cybersecurity Lab
At the Cybersecurity Lab you can learn about the Dark Web, the ‘hidden’ online space which is increasingly open for cybercrime. You will also learn how to increase your personal security in cyberspace. White-hat hackers, who promote a more secure Internet, will demonstrate how cybercrime is both conducted and fought in practice. Take a guided tour through the Dark Web: What are the leading online dark markets? How does this all work and why does it create challenges for law enforcement? How we we classify ’good’ and ‘bad’ use of anonymising technologies in relation to activism and crime? Watch a simulated cyber-attack: What is a distributed denial of service (DDoS)? How much knowledge and resources are needed to knock-down a server? Discuss counter-measures: What are the threats, risks and targets? What should governments, the corporate sector, and citizens bear in mind?
Presenters:
- Bjoern Christian Wolf, St Gallen University / LSE
- Predrag Tasevski, University of Donja Gorica
Moderator: Vladimir Radunović, Director Cybersecurity Programme, DiploFoundation
Registration
Registrations are now closed.
To participate, fill in the registration form by 27 March. For further information, contact Tereza Horejsova at terezah@diplomacy.edu. The event does not provide online participation.
The first Cybersecurity Day, entitled Cybersecurity: A Strategic View, was organised on 15 January 2015.
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