Viable human societies in general and businesses in particular have always required trust. Our dramatically growing dependence on information systems inescapably allocate more and more of this trust from humans to technology. Unfortunately, both accumulated experience and a growing body of expert opinion increasingly call into serious question whether it is responsible to place substantial trust in this technology at all, especially in the face of professional attacks. The good news is that the state of the science of information security is astonishingly rich with solutions and tools to incrementally and selectively solve the hard problems. The bad news is that the state of the actual application of science, and the general knowledge and understanding of the existing science, is lamentably poor. The challenge for scholars and practitioners is to aggressively work to remedy this before our professional efforts to expand the reach of technology becomes a recipe for disaster.
Dr. Schell originated several key modern security design and evaluation techniques and holds patents in cryptography and authentication. He participated in sponsored “tiger team” penetration tests of several commercial and security enhanced operating systems and networks for various government activities including the Defense Intelligence Agency, the U. S. Air Force, the Office of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and the Central Intelligence Agency. He has more than 60 publications, and was Associate Professor of Computer Science at the Naval Postgraduate School. The NIST and NSA recognized him with the 1991 National Computer System Security Award, the nation's highest honor in the computer security field. Dr. Schell is a retired USAF Colonel. He received a Ph.D. in Computer Science from the MIT, an M.S.E.E. from Washington State, and a B.S.E.E. from Montana State.
Return to Santa Clara Valley Chapter IEEE Computer Society page.