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LecturersMarc Dacier, Institut Eurécom, Sophia Antipolis Dr. Dacier is a full professor at Eurecom, France, since October 1^st 2017, and has been the Chair of the Digital Security department until February 2021 He obtained his Phd in 1994 from the INPT, France and has since had a balanced career between industry and academia. After one year as a security consultant in Paris, France, he joined IBM Research to create the Global Security Analysis Laboratory. In 2002, he became a professor at Eurecom. In 2008, he joined Symantec to build its European Research Labs and manage all the ongoing collaborative research projects, worldwide. In that role, he was in charge of teams in France, Ireland and in the United States. He was also the university relationship manager for Symantec Research Labs, worldwide. In 2014, he became the director of the cybersecurity research group at QCRI, in Qatar, where he lived for 3 years. An internationally recognized expert in cybersecurity, Dr. Dacier has served on more than 100 program committees of all major security and dependability conferences and as a member of the editorial board of several technical peer reviewed journals. Romain Cayre, LAAS-CNRS, University of Toulouse, Apsys Lab Romain Cayre and Florent Galtier are PhD students of the TSF (Dependable Computing and Fault Tolerance) research team of the LAAS-CNRS french laboratory, in Toulouse. Florent Galtier received his engineering diploma in Signal processing and Networking from ENSEEIHT (Ecole Nationale Supérieure d'Electrotechnique, d'Electronique, d'Informatique, d'Hydraulique et des Télécommunications) in 2019. Romain Cayre received his engineering diploma from INSA (Institut Nationale des Sciences Appliquées) in 2018. Their main topic of interest is the security of the communications of the IoT networks. They have contributed to the security of these networks by identifying some vulnerabilities related to some widespread wireless networks, such as BLE, but also by providing some security countermeasures in order to detect or prevent some specific attacks, such as spoofing attacks, by means of fingerprinting mechanisms on the physical radio layer. Matthieu Cunche, INSA Lyon, Inria Grenoble - Rhône-Alpes Mathieu Cunche is an associate professor at INSA-Lyon, a member of the CITI Lab and a faculty member of the Inria PRIVATICS team. His research interests include privacy and security in the context of wireless networks, Internet of Things and mobile environments. He is also interested in the analysis of online censorship and surveillance. He conducted several studies on the exposure of personal data from mobile devices, through their Wi-Fi and Bluetooth features. He has been involved in standardization activities, especially at IEEE 802 where he contributed to efforts on privacy protections. Florent Bruguier, LIRMM, University of Montpellier Florent Bruguier received the M.S. and Ph.D. degrees in microelectronics from the University of Montpellier, France, in 2009 and 2012, respectively. He has joined the ADAC team as Associate Professor in 2015. Since 2016, he is in charge of the SECNUM platform; platform dedicated to side channel attacks. He has co-authored over 30 publications. His research interests are focused on secured approaches for embedded and high-performance systems. Vincent Migliore, INSA Toulouse, LAAS-CNRS Vincent Migliore is an associate professor at INSA Toulouse and a researcher in the TSF team at LAAS-CNRS. Vincent has already been involved in 4 research projects related to the improvement of security, i.e.EV-TRUST (securing audiovisual streams), FUI CRYPTOCOMP (securing a Cloud service supporting homomorphic encryption), PEPS-HOMCrypt (improvement of privacy in the field of health) and RISQ (dissemination of post-quantum cryptography into the industry). In addition, he gathered a rich and diversified experience in the creation, management and organisation of Master curricula, e.g. as being in charge of Cryptography courses in the Master's degree TLS-SEC as well as the hardware architectures courses at INSA-Toulouse. Bertrand Leconte, Airbus Defense and Space, Toulouse Bertrand LECONTE started his career working for Groupe Bull, developing software for Electronic Document Management Systems. After several years, he moved to work for Alcatel Group on Internet connectivity implementation and security operations. His first job within Airbus was in 1997 for the company IT part, dealing with cyber security and architecture topics for Airbus internal networks and IT connections with external entities. In 2005, he moved to A380 development team, to ensure security of the on-board Information System. After this, Bertrand was in charge of coordinating Research & Technology Aircraft Product Security activities for Airbus. Since 2019, he is in charge of promoting Security within the satellite ground segments, adapting processes and coordinating technical activities. Guillaume Lussier, Renault, Toulouse Guillaume Lussier is an expert in testing complex systems. He has a PhD from LAAS-CNRS and has worked on critical and connected embedded systems for 20 years. He has a broad experience from critical transportation systems (airplanes and automated subways), to embedded communication with several years in Intel mobile team (SoC for phones and tablets) and is now working as a validation architect in Renault Software Factory. After several years working on embedded Reliability and Cybersecurity, from hardware to low level and OS software, he is now in charge of Onboard to Offboard Integration and Validation test architecture. Benoit Tranier, Thalés Alenia Space, Toulouse Benoit Tranier is a senior system engineer at Thales Alenia Space. After a short period as on-board digital unit responsible he has been responsible of many on-board security communication units. In 2010 he has become a space system engineer. He is now in charge of the definition of security space communication sub-systems. Since 2019, he is also involved into quantum cryptography (QKD) space projects. Benoit Morgan, INP/ENSEEIHT, IRIT, University of Toulouse Benoît Morgan is associate professor at INP-ENSEEIHT and IRIT Toulouse France. His security research topics are focusing on critical embedded systems, kernels, virtualization and hardware architectures. He contributes to those areas by proposing : novel attacks, security architectures and system verification using formal methods. He more recently worked on reverse engineering of remote Online Social Networks algorithms. Regarding his teaching duties, he is involved in a cross university Security teaching program called TLS-SEC. Stéphane Duverger, Airbus, Toulouse Stephane Duverger is a cyber security research engineer at Airbus for 15+ years. His main interests are OS kernel and virtualization technologies security. Benoît Camredon, Airbus, Toulouse Benoît Camredon is a security engineer at Airbus, specialized in avionics audit. He has ten years experience in avionic cybersecurity. After several years spent in development and system administration, he began in 2008 writing high level security rules for aircraft embedded systems. Since 2011, he has specialized in security low level audits and penetration testing. In 2015, he developed a USB framework, presented in a french security conference, used to emulate USB peripherals and assess USB stacks and drivers robustness. |
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