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Conference to Address Information Security

The conference will host a variety of security presentations and work shops.

The Global InfoSec 2002 Conference is a follow-up to the successful Global E-commerce 2002 Conference that keyed on e-commerce and e-government operations in a world at risk and which took place at the United Nations in February 2002.

The February conference included almost 900 attendees, from 120 countries, with about a 50-50 split between senior diplomats and senior private sector executives making up the audience. There is no charge for private sector IT executives to attend the Global InfoSec 2002 conference.

For more information, or to register for the conference, please visit this Web site.

Leading Digital Government executives who will speak at the conference include Cathilea Robinett, Executive Director of the Center for Digital Government.

The Global InfoSec 2002 conference includes a number of special guest speakers, keynote presentations and three expert panels.

Private sector executive speakers include experts from Accenture, Cisco, Concord Communications, Eyretel plc, Hewlett Packard, IBM, Microsoft, Oracle, SchlumbergerSema, Computerworld Magazine, eWEEK Magazine, Center for Digital Government, Yale, Columbia, and New York University, CERT Coordination Center, Business Software Alliance, the International Information Systems Security Association, eWEEK Magazine, Computerworld Magazine and the Center for Digital Government.

Global InfoSec 2002 will boast world class speakers who will provide national level tutorials for the many diplomats and ambassadors in attendance and the anticipated 500 to 600 private sector attendees from leading Fortune 1000 firms. Special guest speakers include Howard Schmidt, Vice Chair, President's Critical Infrastructure Protection Board, Washington, D.C.; Chris Israel, Deputy Assistant Secretary of Commerce for Technologies, U.S. Department of Commerce; Robert Weaver, Deputy Agent in Charge, U.S. Secret Service New York Electronic Crimes Take Force; and a number of U.N. Ambassadors.

Keynote speakers will provide high-level presentations on how nations and international corporations can best solve computer security breaches, and, more importantly, how they can prevent breaches from occurring.

The conference will have three segments: The High Level Session includes segments on national and international solutions; the Business Session includes segments on enhancing private and public sector information security; the Public Sector Session includes segments on making use of private sector information security solutions.

Association for Information Technologies