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Dependability Development Support Initiative. DDSI aims to establish networks of interest, to provide baseline data and to develop policy roadmaps on information infrastructure dependability. Marking the transition of II dependability from a bottom up, technical concern to a public policy
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1. DDSI Overview DDSI, AMSD, ACIP R&D Workshop
Brussels, 19 September 2002
2. Dependability DevelopmentSupport Initiative DDSI aims to establish networks of interest, to provide baseline data and to develop policy roadmaps on information infrastructure dependability.
Marking the transition of II dependability from a bottom up, technical concern to a public policy & strategic business concern
Viewing dependability as a business enabler
Across national and sectoral boundaries
European focus, global context
Informing the policy debate The objective of the Dependability Development Support Initiative (DDSI) is to support the European Commission in the development of dependability policies across Europe and across sectoral boundaries. DDSI aims to establish networks of interest, to provide baseline data and to develop policy roadmaps. These products will support policy activities by European institutions and by public and private sector stakeholders across the EU, in Accession States and in partner nations.
The consortium is led by RAND Europe (NL) and includes Kings’ College London (UK), Cell Network (Sweden), IABG (Germany), Almaweb (Italy), LINK (Portugal), ELIAMEP (Greece), Ernst Basler & Partners (Switzerland), ISDEFE (Spain) and is supported by Martech International and Origami. (B).
The state-of-the-art overview of dependability in Europe and in the world is unique and provides the base line for further research and policy development. By defining the key concepts DDSI contributed to bringing together in common understanding the different communities they see as their target audiences.
DDSI’s activities and reports are available from http://www.ddsi.org. Key messages are:
information infrastructures form a critical part of our economy
We need to understand how dependable that infrastructure is
We need to enhance it in cross sector and transnational collaboration
The objective of the Dependability Development Support Initiative (DDSI) is to support the European Commission in the development of dependability policies across Europe and across sectoral boundaries. DDSI aims to establish networks of interest, to provide baseline data and to develop policy roadmaps. These products will support policy activities by European institutions and by public and private sector stakeholders across the EU, in Accession States and in partner nations.
The consortium is led by RAND Europe (NL) and includes Kings’ College London (UK), Cell Network (Sweden), IABG (Germany), Almaweb (Italy), LINK (Portugal), ELIAMEP (Greece), Ernst Basler & Partners (Switzerland), ISDEFE (Spain) and is supported by Martech International and Origami. (B).
The state-of-the-art overview of dependability in Europe and in the world is unique and provides the base line for further research and policy development. By defining the key concepts DDSI contributed to bringing together in common understanding the different communities they see as their target audiences.
DDSI’s activities and reports are available from http://www.ddsi.org. Key messages are:
information infrastructures form a critical part of our economy
We need to understand how dependable that infrastructure is
We need to enhance it in cross sector and transnational collaboration
3. Deliverables Concepts
Conceptual Framework
Global Inventory/Benchmarking
Global Policy Status Overview
EU and NAS Policy Status Report
Public Policy Findings
Public Policy Workshop
Policy Synthesis
Public conference (10 October, Brussels)
Warning and Information Sharing
Public Private Partnerships
R&D Policy
4. Public Policy Synthesis eEurope 2005 actions for industry, Member States & EC
Policy-making
Deterrence
Protection
Detection
Risk Management
5. R&D Policy Roadmap
a strategic roadmap for the development of a European R&D programme aimed at improving the dependability of Europe’s information infrastructures
identify strategic approaches to develop a coherent and overarching research strategy addressing all aspects of information infrastructure dependability
provide a basis for other roadmaps
6. Towards a Roadmap
7. R&D Roadmaps EU
FP6 planning
US
OSTP & Blue Book, I3P
UK
DERA
France
Réseau Nationale de Recherche en Télécommunications (RNRT)
Information Assurance Advisory Council
R&D WG
8. RM Lessons Learned Who sets scope? How?
Forecast, backcast, user survey
Breadth of participation in topic identification & prioritisation
Scope (infosec – CIP)
Inclusion of non-technical issues
Structure of process
9. R&D WG With some honourable exceptions, much of the R&D underway in both the government and corporate sectors, as well as in academia, is not seeking to address over-the-horizon issues that, given the accelerating pace of change in technology and business practices, are closer than one may think
There are a number of obvious reasons why Information Assurance and Security R&D has remained behind the curve, including the ways in which government R&D plans are formulated and the short-term commercial interests of many private sector sponsors of research
November 2000
10. EU/US Workshop Supported by DDSI, December 2001
Aims of workshop:
discussed framework for collaboration between the EU and USA on R&D for information infrastructure dependability
roadmap priority areas for future collaboration
Report finalised in April 2002
Available at http://deppy.jrc.it
11. Towards an R&D Strategy An R&D strategy must include the following components:
R&D Management
RM processes, management/funding, evaluation
R&D Content
A contribution to the AMSD/EC synthesis (esp inter-disciplinary issues) – beyond a shopping list
Research & Policy
Technology Take-up