IBM, LexisNexis and the Secret Service are among a group of corporations, government agencies and academic institutions that has formed to study and help solve identity management challenges around cybercrime, terrorism and narcotics trafficking.
The Center for Applied Identity Management Research (CAIMR) will study those issues and focus on developing real-world tools and best-practices recommendations to solve them.
The nonprofit research organization, which will be headquartered at Indiana University, brings together experts in criminal justice, financial crime, biometrics, cybercrime and cyberdefense, data protection, homeland security and national defense.
CAIMR will examine the challenges, knowledge gaps and research needed to solve identity issues in areas such as individual privacy, cybersecurity, and data breaches, and outline how those issues effect public safety, commerce, government programs and national security.
Gary R. Gordon, a senior scholar in identity management at Indiana University School of Law will be CAIMR's executive director.
In a statement, Michael Merritt, assistant director in the office of investigations for the U.S. Secret Service, said "Successfully combating emerging identity crimes requires that the Secret Service and law enforcement forge and enhance partnerships with industry, academic and research organizations."
The group has laid out four initial areas of study:
-- Public safety, which includes identity theft, cybercrime, computer crime, organized criminal groups, document fraud and sexual predator detection.
-- National security, including cybersecurity and cyberdefense, human trafficking and illegal immigration, terrorist tracking and financing.
-- Financial and corporate fraud, including mortgage fraud and other financial crimes, data breaches, e-commerce fraud, insider threats and healthcare fraud.
-- Individual protection, including identity theft and fraud.
CAIMR's founding members include Indiana University, the Secret Service, LexisNexis, IBM, Cogent Systems, Visa and Intersections, Inc.
Other members of CAIMR are Fair Isaac, University of Texas at Austin, Wells Fargo & Company, U.S. Marshals Service, Dragnet Solutions, ID Experts, Identity Theft Assistance Corporation, Information Technology Association of America, and National Center for Missing and Exploited Children.
References
Latest on Passwords
- Twitter forces password reset to protect some accounts
- MasterCard to authenticate online transactions by phone
- Delta Air Lines sued over alleged e-mail hacking
- Researchers advise cyber self defense in the cloud
- Citing cybercrime, FBI director doesn't bank online
- A look at stolen Hotmail data finds simple passwords
- Gmail, Yahoo Mail join Hotmail; passwords exposed
- Phishing scam steals Twitter passwords
- eBay requires developers to change their account passwords
- Men are less security savvy than women
Security Essentials
- Good security in recessionary times
- Security ROI: Fact or Fiction?
- NetWitness releases free version of security software
- Study: critical infrastructure often under cyberattack
- Crooks can make $5M a year shilling fake security software
- Sun exec: IT security should follow business needs
- Clumsy staff more dangerous than hackers: survey
- When the watchdog is the underdog
- Mafiaboy grows up; a hacker seeks redemption
- Ouch! Security pros' worst mistakes
- Instructional Designer (Training Developer) (s15)10/02/2010
Other
I.T. & T
Instructional Designer (Training Developer) (s15) - BUSINESS DEVELOPMENT MANAGER - CONTENT MANAGEMENT SYSTEMS, INTRANETS,10/02/2010
Other
I.T. & T
BUSINESS DEVELOPMENT MANAGER - CONTENT MANAGEMENT SYSTEMS, INTRANETS, - Informatica PowerCenter Consultants10/02/2010
Other
I.T. & T
Informatica PowerCenter Consultants - WEB CONTENT MANAGEMENT SYSTEMS - BUSINESS DEVELOPMENT MANAGER10/02/2010
Other
I.T. & T
WEB CONTENT MANAGEMENT SYSTEMS - BUSINESS DEVELOPMENT MANAGER - Senior Tester9/02/2010
Other
I.T. & T
Senior Tester
Whitepapers
-
A Fundamental Failure | The legal risks of neglecting an IT security assessment -
Video Case Study | Unified Communications for Small Business -
Computerworld Strategy Guide: Business Intelligence -
How Small Businesses Worldwide Use Communications to Thrive in the New Economy -
Business Continuity: A Guide to Choosing the Right Technology Solution






Comments
Post new comment