- Info
Agenda
Day One | Day Two
Day One: Wednesday 29th February
8:30 Registration and Coffee
9:00 Opening Remarks from Chair:
Bill Paterson PSM, Australian Ambassador for Counter-Terrorism
9:10 Keynote Opening Addresses
Australia's National Security Agenda Going Forward
Rogers Wilkins AO, Secretary, Attorney-General's Department
9:50 Keynote Address
Developing and Implementing Australias International Counter-Terrorism Efforts
- A decade after 9/11 and the first Bali bombing, terrorism has become more diffuse and often smaller scale, in response to disruption operations over the last decade
- It presents new challenges for intelligence and law enforcement
- Attention is now turning to long-term strategies and programs to deal with the drivers of radicalisation and to counter violent extremism, to seek to prevent new generations of terrorists from developing
Bill Paterson PSM, Australian Ambassador for Counter-Terrorism
10:30 Morning Tea
11:00 Responding to Domestic Crises Towards a More Nationwide Approach
- The impact of 201011 events on the way we respond to crises
- The risks of a slow response
- Planning to cope with several concurrent major crises nationwide
- Improving information flow between all jurisdictions
- Understanding the national capability in preparation, response and recovery both government and private
- Having the processes and agility to activate and deploy national capability
- Understanding the risks and dangers in denuding capability in certain domains or locations
Campbell Darby, First Assistant Secretary Emergency Management Australia, Attorney-Generals Department
11:40 Counter Terrorism: A Case Study to Improve Emergency Management
- Applying the principles from the efforts to counter terrorism to the all hazards, all agencies approach to emergency management
- Dealing with the broader partnership thats needed
- Common standards for inter-agency and cross-sector collaboration and interoperability
Michael Hallowes, Emergency Services Commissioner, Office of the Emergency Services Commissioner, Victoria
12:20 Lunch
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Stream A Terrorism & Counter-Terrorism
Chair: Bill Paterson PSM, Australian Ambassador
for Counter-Terrorism
1.20 Analysing and Disseminating the Technical Intelligence That Can Be Gleaned From Any Bombing Incident in Australia or the Near Region
- Current IED trends and threats to Australia
- How we are enhancing Bomb Data Centres in the Asia-Pacific Region
- How we use technical intelligence to protect Australian first responders and guide policy makers
- Technical Intelligence and how it supports operations
- Disrupting IED networks both domestically and off-shore
Phil Winter, Director, Australian Bomb Data Centre (AFP)
2.00 Australian Counter-Terrorism Update
- Keeping terrorism off-shore
- Current trends and threats to Australians
- How we are enhancing National counter-terrorism efforts
2.40 Afternoon Tea
3.10 Terrorism/Counter-Terrorism
Speaker to be advised
3.50 Current CT Challenges Confronting Authorities
- The threat of home-grown terrorism in Australia
- Strategies to reduce alienation and radicalism
- Examining current risks
Assistant Commissioner Stephen Fontana APM, Assistant
Commissioner Northwest Metro Region and former
Assistant Commissioner Counter Terrorism Coordination
and Emergency Management Department, Victoria Police
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Stream B Cyber Crime
Chair: Alastair MacGibbon, Director, Centre for Internet Safety,
University of Canberra and Managing Partner, Surete Group.
Former head of Trust & Safety at eBay Asia Pacific and founding
Director of the Australian High Tech Crime Centre
1.20 Cyber Security: Keeping up with Technology to Stay
Smart Online
- The changing focus of cyber security and cyber safety
- Adapting messages to keep up with the growth in social
networking and other emerging technologies
- Encouraging personal behavioural change to protect
the community and small business online
Sabeena Oberoi, Assistant Secretary, Cybersecurity & Asia-Pacific Engagement Branch, Department of
Broadband, Communications and the Digital Economy
2.00 Fighting Cyber Crime and Improving Cyber Security:
The Roles of Individuals, Businesses and Governments
- Have we got the balance of responsibilities right so far?
- How different is the cyber crime fight to the cyber security
effort?
- Where are the key leverage points?
Alastair MacGibbon, Director, Centre for Internet Safety,
University of Canberra and Managing Partner, Surete Group. Former head of Trust & Safety at eBay Asia Pacific and
founding Director of the Australian High Tech Crime Centre
2.40 Afternoon Tea
3.10 Hacktivism, Terror and the State: The Importance
of Effectively Enforcing Cyber Security Legislation
- We investigate the growth of hactivism and its
development into other forms
- The growth, development, splintering
and metamorphosis of hacktivist groups
- Interactions with cyber-crime and hacktivism and how
these groups are subverted for other ends
- How states attack states through causes
- False-flag. The use of hacktivism as a cover for cyberwar
and how state can remain clean
- How terror groups can use populist causes for their
own ends
- The collateral damage, when hacktivism leads to groups
attacking other groups
Dr. Craig Wright, Executive Vice President, Asia Pacific,
GICSR | Global Institute for Cyber Security + Research
3.50 Risk Management and Strategies to Curb Cyber Theft
and Cyber Crime
- Anonymous online market places trading illegal commodities
- The risk of identity fraud online
- The threat of virtual currencies
- The online funding of illegal activities including organised
crime and terrorism
Detective Superintendent Brian Hay, Head -
Fraud & Corporate Crime Group, Queensland Police
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4.30 Closing Remarks from Chair
4.40 IIR invites all speakers and delegates to an informal cocktail reception to discuss the day's issues
and network with their peers