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2007 SPEAKERS
Douglas Adams
Dr. Richard Benkin
Prof. Louis Rene Beres
James Blom
Kevin Casey
Col. Bill Cowan
Dr. Andrew M. Colarik
Kevin Coleman
Col. Gordon Cucullu
Tom Darcy
Nonie Darwish
Drs. Jill Dekker
Dr. Rachel Ehrenfeld
Ilana Freedman
Dave Gaubatz
Ra-anan Gissin
Jerry Gordon
Col. Jonathan Halevi
Scott Jackson
Alireza Jaffarzadeh
Lee Kaplan
Joe Kaufman
Laura Mansfield
Cdr. Richard Marcinko
Ryan Mauro
Gen. Thomas McInerney
Richard Miniter
LTC. Joe Myers
Bob Newman
Patrick Poole
Konstantin Preobrazhensky
Dr. William Radasky
Klaus Schmidt
Avi Shachar
Wayne Simmons
Alon Stivi
Dr. Babu Suseeian
Gen. Paul E. Vallely
Chris Westphal
Dr Paul Williams
Terri K. Wonder
Secular Islam Summit:
Walid Phares
Shaker al-Nabulsi
Irshad Manji
Amir Taheri
Magdi Allam
Ibn Warraq
Fatemolla
Afshin Ellian
Banafsheh Zand-Bonazzi
Tawfik Hamid |
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G. Kenneth Hunter Chief Scientist and Founder, SecureBasis |
Biography

G. Ken Hunter separated in July 2002 from the Navy as a Lieutenant Commander, having served 16 years,
including his years at the U. S. Naval Academy. He graduated with a Computer Sciences degree.
Upon graduation, Ken joined the cryptologic/security community, spending several years on
classified missions and detailed to posts involved with all aspects of Information Warfare
strategy and tactics. He held a TS/SCI clearance, with a counter-intelligence polygraph.
He graduated the Naval Postgraduate School in 1998, earning a Masters in Computer Sciences.
He finished first in his class, received the Grace Hopper award for his thesis, and taught evening
classes on new programming paradigms (at the request of the faculty, who also attended). Ken’s
thesis designed the entire software suite for a new class of smaller, low resource satellites. This
included both the space-based and the ground station software. PANSAT was the first
experimental version of these satellites. It went up on the John Glenn Space Shuttle mission and
continues operating to this day. Included in the thesis were several math-based technology
advances for low resource fault-tolerance. Due to their significance, the Navy has republished
this portion of Ken’s thesis twice.
Ken is one of the rare individuals with both theoretical grounding and practical experiences in
several technology disciplines: security, operating systems, programming, networking and
advanced mathematics.
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Session TE32: Information Sharing and Information Assurance - Can They Work Together? February 20, 10:00 - 10:45
Abstract:
Within the Intelligence Community, these Sharing and Security are viewed as separate
disciplines. But for each to achieve its individual mission, they need to be united into a single
"Information Sharing Assurance." However, both technical and cultural issues are in the way,
and technology has been unable to address the cultural obstacles. At least, up to now.
This Technology panel's view of the underlying technology problem is best summed up by
Bertrand Russell: "The greatest challenge to any thinker is stating the problem in a way that will
allow a solution."
The first speaker will talk about a different view of computers that redefines the fundamental
technology problem, and in the near future, will yield a permanent solution to this persistent
issue of systems security. And to deal with the real problems facing the audience today, the other
two speakers will provide practical comments about some technologies available today and some
thoughts on the specific uses and limits of cryptography in sharing environments.
The speakers have had relevant cyber security experiences with the NSA, the US Navy, and the
FBI, plus private sector experiences in Systems Integration, Cryptography, and Hi-tech products.
And the panelists do not represent any of the available technologies that will be discussed.
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