| one of the Digital
Libraries Colloquium Series (Download
Flyer) Sponsored by the School of Computer Science-Carnegie Mellon University, the School of Information Sciences-University of Pittsburgh, the University Library System-University of Pittsburgh, the University Libraries-Carnegie Mellon University and the Carnegie Library of Pittsburgh |
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“Can
We Avoid Catastrophic Failures of Computer Networks?” |
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Abstract: The number of viruses and other computer threatening software is increasing at alarming speed. Even if we act decisively, (which we don't) the likelihood of a large scale and long-term failure of all computers, computer networks and information systems is high. Drawing on examples of critical digital databases and federated libraries, we see that the consequences of a serious failure are catastrophic. Such failure will not be caused by some super-hacker, but rather by a well-planned cyber-attack. Since our dependency on computers and computer networks is steadily increasing, consequences will be worse the later such a breakdown occurs! In this talk we argue why a failure is likely and what it will cause if we do not take precautions that involve technical, economical and political decisions that are fairly far-reaching. Speaker Bio: Born in Vienna, Austria, Maurer studied
mathematics and computer science at the Universities
of Vienna and Calgary, and was Assistant and later Associate
Professor for Computer Science at the University of Calgary
1966-1971. He then took on various positions as full
professor at a number of universities, and is now at
the Graz University of Technology specializing in networked
multimedia systems and their applications to knowledge
management, learning, digital libraries, museums, and
societal implications of new developments in computers.
As hobby he is writing a series of Science Fiction novels. |
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