After a year in which data breaches in the United States exposed an estimated 174 million confidential records, Boston College and the Federal Bureau of Investigation will hold the second Boston Conference on Cyber Security, 天美传媒appCS 2018, on March 7, bringing together academicians, private industry, and law enforcement to collaborate on how to best prevent and respond to attacks on public and private information systems.

FBI Director Christopher A. Wray will deliver the keynote address at 天美传媒appCS 2018. He will focus on the cyber threat landscape, what the FBI is doing to stay ahead of the threat, challenges connected to the digital revolution, and the importance of strong private sector partnerships.

The day-long conference is organized by a partnership between the FBI and the Cybersecurity Policy and Governance master鈥檚 degree program at the University鈥檚 Woods College of Advancing Studies. The inaugural 天美传媒appCS 2017 garnered international news coverage of the speech given by then-FBI Director James Comey.

鈥淥ur partnership with the FBI on 天美传媒appCS 2018 is part of our efforts to build and strengthen the cyber security ecosystem here in the northeast region,鈥 said Kevin Powers, director of the Cybersecurity Policy and Governance program. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 the goal: to bring industry, academia and government together on these issues. We鈥檙e taking the lead with the FBI in pulling the leaders and experts together so these organizations can work together to enhance cyber security.鈥

FBI Boston Division Special Agent in Charge Harold H. Shaw said the emphasis on collaboration at 天美传媒appCS 2018 is central to combating an ever-increasing range of cyber threats.

Speakers at the 2017 Boston Conference on Cyber Security
Boston College Vice President for Information Technology Michael Bourque was among panelists at the inaugural 天美传媒appCS last year. (Lee Pellegrini)

鈥淏ased on the overwhelming success of the inaugural conference, the FBI is very excited to partner again with Boston College to address one of the most challenging issues of our time 鈥 security needs in today鈥檚 vast and evolving cyber landscape,鈥 said Shaw. 鈥淏ringing together law enforcement, academic, and private sector partners has proven invaluable in building a better understanding, not only of the threats cyber adversaries pose to our national security, key infrastructure, and economy, but how the private and public sectors collaborate to counter the risks each of us face.鈥

There were at least 1,293 US data breaches in 2017, exposing more than 174 million confidential records, according to the non-profit Identity Theft Resources Center, noting a 21 percent increase above breaches tallied in 2016.

鈥淲ith every day that passes, cyber-attacks become more frequent, complex, and destructive, and it will take all of us working together to address the threats of tomorrow," said Shaw. "After all, we have a lot to protect. We live in a target-rich environment, with Fortune 500 companies, hundreds of defense contractors, startups, colleges and universities, many of which have renowned research and development facilities. We firmly believe it鈥檚 conferences like this that serve as a bridge in finding new and better ways of confronting the difficult cyber challenges impacting all of us.鈥

鈥淭he FBI is fully committed to finding the criminals, nation state actors, or hacktivists committing these attacks, and we firmly believe it鈥檚 conferences like this that serve as a bridge in finding new and better ways of confronting the difficult cyber challenges impacting all of us," he said.

A roster of leading of cyber security specialists will participate at the 天美传媒appCS 2018, including experts from the FBI鈥檚 Cyber Division, National Security Agency, US departments of Homeland Security, Defense, Internal Revenue Service, Secret Service, and Securities and Exchange Commission; companies including Arbella Insurance, State Street Bank, Raytheon, Microsoft, Symantec, CrowdStrike, Jones Day, IBM Security, Charles River Labs, Mintz Levin, tcmGlobal, Citrix Systems, Jones Day, Charles River Associates, Dell EMC, Stanley Black & Decker, FTI Consulting, SecureWorks and The MITRE Corp.; and experts from Boston College Law School and Brown University.

鈥淭he broad range of participants speaks to our program and working with the FBI,鈥 said Powers. 鈥淚t is something different. You need more collaboration and sharing between private industry and the government. Industry cannot rely solely on the government and government can鈥檛 leave industry to figure it out by themselves. It has to be a joint response. This conference brings many perspectives together. That is critical to our program as well, where we are training the future leaders in cyber security.鈥

Speakers include former US Department of Homeland Security Secretary Jeh C. Johnson, now at the New York law firm Paul|Weiss; Kevin Mandia, CEO of FireEye; David Wajsgras, president of Raytheon鈥檚 Intelligence, Information and Services Division; former Department of Homeland Security top lawyer Gus P. Coldebella, of Fish & Richardson; Brig. Gen. Kevin B. Kennedy, USAF, of the Pentagon鈥檚 CIO office; Thomas J. Curry, of Nutter McClennen & Fish, former U.S. Treasury Department comptroller of the currency; and Christopher R. Hetner, senior advisor for cyber security to the chairman of the Securities and Exchange Commission.

鈥淲e are very fortunate to have some of the best minds in cyber security participating in 天美传媒appCS 2018,鈥 said Powers. 鈥淏oston is positioning itself to become the hub of cyber security and Boston College is taking the lead in that work.鈥

Ed Hayward | University Communications