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ECIW 2011
7-8 July, Tallinn, Estonia
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Proceedings of
The 9th European Conference on Information Warfare and Security
held at the Department of Applied Informatics, University of Macedonia, Thessaloniki, Greece.
1-2 July 2010

 

The proceedings of the above conference are now available to purchase in two formats, Book or CD-ROM:

UK AND EUROPE: Cost for book, including post and packing is £60.00. Cost for CD, including post and packing, is £50.
REST OF THE WORLD: Cost for book, including post and packing is £65.00. Cost for CD, including post and packing, is £55.

The Contents of the Proceedings are shown below.

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Paper Title

Author(s)

Page No.

Preface

 

v

Biographies of Conference Chairs, Programme Chair, Keynote Speaker and Mini-track Chairs

 

vii

Biographies of contributing authors

 

ix

How the Pride Attacks

Sabah Al-Fedaghi
Kuwait University, Kuwait

1

Towards Symmetrization of Asymmetric air Dominance: The Potential key Role Playing by Home-Made low Cost Unmanned Aerial Systems

Laurent Beaudoin and Antoine Gademer
ESIEA, Paris, France

11

Electronic Digital Passport as a Means of Partial Response to the Lack of Intelligence in the Field of Border Control

Alexander Bligh
Ariel University Center, Ariel, Israel

19

Zero-Sum Games of Deception

Sviatoslav Braynov
University of Illinois at Springfield, USA

28

Developing Strategic Perspectives for Enterprise Risk Management Towards Information Assurance

Aristeidis Chatzipoulidis 1, Ioannis Mavridis1 and Theodoros Kargidis2
1
University of Macedonia, Thessaloniki, Greece
2Alexander Technological Educational Institute, Thessaloniki, Greece

35

Sniffing With the Portuguese Identify Card for fun and Profit

Paul Crocker1,2, Vasco Nicolau1 and Simão Melo de Sousa1
1University of Beira Interior Covilhã, Portugal
2Institute of Telecommunications, Covilhã, Portugal

43

Information Warfare in Greece and Rome: Cryptography and Steganography

Evan Dembskey
Tshwane University of Technology, South Africa

56

Anti-Forensic Techniques Based on Malicious Cryptography

Eric Filiol
ESIEA - Operational virology and cryptology laboratory, Laval, France

63

Exploiting the Hutu/Tutsi Divide: The Relationship Between Extremist Propaganda and Genocide in Rwanda

Sarah Gendron
Marquette University, Milwaukee, USA

73

Smart Card, the Invisible Bullet

Vincent Guyot
ESIEA, Paris, France

80

Cyber Antagonism Between Hacker Groups Develops new Challenges

Roland Heickerö
Swedish Defence Research Agency (FOI),
Stockholm, Sweden

8/8

The Malicious Insider Problem: An Integrated View on Individual, Organizational and Contextual Influencing Factors

Ulrike Hugl
University of Innsbruck, Austria

93

The Way of Warfare in Three Possible Worlds – From art of war to Information Warfare

Aki-Mauri Huhtinen
National Defence University,
Helsinki, Finland

102

Changing Security Speech and Environment: From Nation States to Corporation Security

Aki-Mauri Huhtinen1 and Kari Laitinen2
1
National Defence University, Helsinki, Finland
2Police College of Finland, Tampere, Finland

109

Influence Operations and Behavioural Change

William Hutchinson1, 2 and Matthew Warren2
1
SECAU, Edith Cowan University, Western Australia
2Deakin University, Victoria, Australia

116

Identities, Anonymity and Information Warfare

Stuart Jacobs, Lou Chitkushev and Tanya Zlateva
Boston University, MA, USA

120

How to Grasp Emerging Futures of Information Wars?

Auli Keskinen
National Defence University, Helsinki, Finland

128

Future Requirements for Deception in Naval Defence

Theodoros Kostis1, Athanasios Goudosis1, Konstantinos Galanis2 and Ioannis Koukos3
1University of the Aegean, Karlovassi, Greece
2Ethnodata S.A., Greece
3Hellenic Naval Academy, Greece

137

Detecting XML Data Irregularities by Means of Lexical Analysis and Parsing

Dirk Kotze and Martin Olivier
University of Pretoria, South Africa

151

Operations Management of Information Security at Enterprise Levels

Pertti Kuokkanen
Defence Command Finland, Finland

160

The Finnish air Surveillance Radar System Evolution – From war Time Experience to Network Enabled Warfare System

Martti Lehto1 and Juha-Antti Lamberg2
1
National Defense University, Helsinki, Finland
2Aalto University School of Science and Technology, Finland

168

War and Ethics in Cyberspace: Cyber-Conflict and Just War Theory

Andrew Liaropoulos
University of Piraeus, Greece

177

“She Wolves and Russian Brides” – Women Enemies in war Propaganda”

Tiina Lintunen
University of Turku, Finland

183

Towards a Framework for the Generation of Enhanced Attack and Background Network Traffic for Evaluation of Network-Based Intrusion Detection Systems

Owen Lo, Jamie Graves and William Buchanan
Edinburgh Napier University
, UK

190

Towards a Risk Management Based Approach for Protecting Internet Conversations

Dimitrios Michalopoulos1, Ioannis Mavridis1 and Vasileios Vitsas2
1
University of Macedonia, Thessaloniki, Greece
2Alexander Technological Educational Institute of Thessaloniki, Greece

201

Analysis of Malicious Affiliate Network Activity as a Test Case for an Investigatory Framework

Mathew Miehling1, William Buchanan1, John Old1, Alan Batey2 and Arshad Rahman3
1
Napier University, Edinburgh, UK
2Detective Sergeant, Computer Crime Unit, Northumbria Police, UK
3Financial Services Authority, London, UK

209

Block Based Steganography

Hamdy Morsy1, Joshua Gluckman2, Ahmed Hussein1 and Fathy Amer1
1
Helwan University, Cairo, Egypt
2American University in Cairo, Egypt

218

Hacking for fun and Education: eLearning on Network Security

Alexander Ott and Richard Sethmann
University of Applied Sciences, Bremen, Germany

229

Proactive Defense Tactics Against On-Line Cyber Militia

Rain Ottis
Cooperative Cyber Defence Centre of Excellence

233

The Necessity of Implementing a Long-term Security Strategy in Public Administration Organizations from Romania

Marius Petrescu, Ionut Barbu, Gabriela Popa, Valentina-Ofelia Robescu
Valahia University from Targoviste, Romania

238

An Applied Framework for Modelling a Critical Infrastructure System Incident

Graeme Pye and Matthew Warren
Deakin University, Geelong, Australia

245

Towards Reversible Cyberattacks

Neil Rowe
U.S. Naval Postgraduate School, Monterey, California, USA

261

Reconfigurable Radio Systems: Towards Secure Collaboration for Peace Support and Public Safety

Johan Sigholm
Swedish National Defence College, Stockholm, Sweden

268

An Alerting System for Interdependent Critical Infrastructures

Paulo Simões1, Paolo Capodieci2, Michele Minicino3, E. Ciancamerla3, S. Panzieri4, M. Castrucci5 and Leonid Lev6
1
CISUC - DEI, University of Coimbra, Portugal
2Selex Communications S.p.A., Italy
3ENEA, Italy
4Università di Roma Tre, Italy
5University of Rome – La Sapienza, Italy
6Israel Electric Corp., Israel

275

Hard Disk Storage: Data Leakage

Iain Sutherland and Gareth Davies
University of Glamorgan, UK

284

Legal Cooperation to Investigate Cyber Incidents: Estonian Case Study and Lessons

Eneken Tikk and Kadri Kaska
Cooperative Cyber Defence Centre of Excellence, Tallinn, Estonia

288

Information Security Education in the Greek Universities and Technological Education Institutes

Theodosios Tsiakis
Technological Educational Institute of Kozani, Greece

295

RIDICULING THE DEMON: The Comical Image of Lazy, Stupid, Ineffective, Helpless, Uncultured Russians During the Winter War 1939–1940 in Finland

Vesa Vares
University of Turku, Finland

302

Motivation and Requirements for Determining a Network Warfare Capability

Namosha Veerasamy and Jan Eloff
University of Pretoria, South Africa

310

Mein Kampf Revisited: Enemy Images as Inversions of the Self

Marja Vuorinen
University of Helsinki, Finland

320

Development of a Supply Chain Management Security Risk Management Method: A Conceptual Model

Matthew Warren and Shona Leitch
Deakin University, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia

327

Behavioural Profiling for Impostor Detection in Mobile Networks

Ibrahim Zincir, Steven Furnell and Andy Phippen
University of Plymouth, UK

334

Research in Progress papers

 

 

Legal Issues and Challenges Involved in Cyber World Business

 

Shubhangi Sunil Bhatambrekar
Modern College, Ganeshkhind, Pune, India

345

Knowledge Management and Knowledge Security – a Conceptual Comparison

Ilona Ilvonen
Tampere University of Technology,
Finland

352

A Conceptual Model Approach to Manage and Audit Information Systems Security

Teresa Pereira1 and Henrique Santos2
1
Polytechnic Institute of Viana do Castelo, Valença, Portugal
2University of Minho, Guimarães, Portugal

360

IST: Improved Steganography for Html

Khan Farhan Rafat and Muhammad Sher
International Islamic University, Islamabad, Pakistan

366

Proactive Cyber Initiative: An Expert System Framework

David Rohret
Computer Sciences Corporation, Inc., San Antonio, USA

378

Cyber Warfare: Virtual war Among Virtual Societies

Anthimos Alexander Tsirigotis
Hellenic Air Force, Athens, Greece

389

Novel Information Sharing Syntax for Data Sharing Between Police and Community Partners, Using Role-Based Security

Omair Uthmani1, William Buchanan1, Alistair Lawson1, Christoph Thuemmler1, Lu Fan1, Russell Scott2, Anne Lavery2 and Chris Mooney3
1
Edinburgh Napier University, UK
2Scottish Police College, Kincardine, UK
3Glasgow Community & Safety Services, Glasgow, UK

 

394

Practitioner Papers

 

 

BinThavro: Towards a Useful and Fast Tool for Goodware and Malware Analysis

Benjamin Caillat, Anthony Desnos and Robert Erra
ESIEA, Paris, France

405

Forensic and Software (UN) Obfuscation

Anthony Desnos and Eloi Vanderbéken
ESIEA, France

416

Last updated 24 June 2010

 

 

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