Chapter 1: Conceptualizing the Internet of Things.- Chapter 2: IoT Frameworks and Complexity Hiding.- Chapter 3: Base Platform Security Hardware Building Blocks.- Chapter 4: IoT Software Security Building Blocks.- Chapter 5: Connectivity Technologies for IoT.- Chapter 6: IoT Vertical Applications and Associated Security Requirements.
Sunil Cheruvu is a Principal Engineer in the Platform
Engineering Division of IOTG at Intel Corporation and has been
involved in architecting complex systems involving HW/FW/SW for
almost 23 years. Implementing the code for Baseline Privacy
security in DOCSIS compliant Cable Modems when he was a Senior SW
Engineer at 3com and a SW Staff Engineer at Conexant. Working
at Microsoft as a SW Design Engineer, he was the tech lead for
Vehicle Networking involving the Bus and Protocol driver stacks.
He took the stacks through the threat modeling and
implemented the resolutions in what was released as the Windows
Mobile for Automotive (WMfA) platform.
At Intel, he was the Content Protection lead and owned the system
level architecture of Conditional Access and Trusted Data Path
(end-2-end premium content protection within a SoC.)
Architecting the security for embedded devices and in his
current role as the Principal Engineer, owns the scaling of
security (from below Atom to Xeon) and on multiple Operating
Systems. He is the subject matter expert for IOTG security across
Intel and outside of Intel.
Anil Kumar is a Principal Engineer in the Platform
Engineering Division of IOTG at Intel Corporation, and is
responsible for the Connectivity Platform Architecture across IOTG.
In this role, he leads the effort with the planning team to create
IOTG's first ever roadmap for connectivity solutions. He is
currently driving platform and chip level integration of several
key connectivity and communication technologies which are critical
for Cyber Physical Systems. Anil joined Intel in 2007 as a design
engineer in Digital Home Group. He served as Platform Architect for
several Intel Architecture based Media Processors for TV and Set
Top Box applications. As the chief architect in Intel Media Group
Anil lead several designs that resulted in award winning consumer
electronic device designs at CES. The world's first Google TV
devices were based on reference design efforts lead by Anil as
well. Prior to joining Intel, Anil held design engineering
positions at multinational companies such as Fujitsu & Alcatel. He
was instrumental in taking several designs from concept to
production throughout his career.
Ned Smith is a Principal Engineer in the Open Technology
Center (OTC) team in the Software Solutions Group at Intel
Corporation. He is responsible for defining Internet of Things
security architecture and standards for open IoT technologies. This
includes defining IoT architecture for Open Connectivity Foundation
(OCF) and IPSO Alliance. Ned chairs the Security, Privacy and
Identity (SPI) work group in IPSO Alliance. He is co-author of the
Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) draft specification,
draft-hardjono-ace-fluffy-03 that defines key management for
constrained environments.
Ned joined Intel Labs in 1995 where he helped define the Common
Data Security Architecture (CDSA) that was standardized by the Open
Group. He chaired the Infrastructure Workgroup (IWG) in the Trusted
Computing Group (TCG) from its inception until 2006. The IWG may
best be known for its work on Network Access Control (NAC)
standards that later became the Trusted Network Connect (TNC)
working group within the TCG. The TNC standards were adopted by a
majority of network security vendors supplying NAC
products.
Ned has been highly influential within Intel having contributed to
a long list of enterprise and office security technologies
including Intel® Identity Protection Technology, Intel® Anti-theft
Technology, Intel® Manageability Engine, Intel® Converged Security
Engine, Intel® Trusted Execution Technology, Intel® Insider™,
Intel® Virtualization Technology, Intel® Deep Defender™, Intel®
Platform Trust Technology, Intel® Software Guard Extensions and
numerous other security, privacy, identity and access management
related projects.
Ned is a prolific inventor having received Intel’s highest award
for patent filing in 2014. He has more than 115 patents granted and
over 290 patents pending.
Dave Wheeler is a Senior Principal Engineer in the Platform
Security Division of IAGS at Intel Corporation and has thirty
years’ experience in software, security and networking. In his
current role, Dave is responsible for research and development of
new cryptographic algorithms and protocols, security APIs and
libraries across Intel including for IoT platforms, performs
security reviews on Intel’s cryptographic implementations, and
represents Intel at the IETF. Within the Internet of Things, Dave
has contributed to Intel’s Software-Defined Industrial Systems
architecture and IOTG’s Health Application Platform. Prior to
Intel, Dave held various lead software and systems architecture
positions at Motorola, Honeywell Bull, General Dynamics, as well as
his own consulting firm. Dave has designed and built several
hardware security engines, including a Type-2 security coprocessor
for a software defined radio, and the Intel Wireless Trust Module,
a hardware cryptographic coprocessor on the Intel XScale processor.
He has implemented several cryptographic libraries and protocol
layers, including an IPSec-type implementation for an SDR radio,
header compression protocol layers for IP, TCP, and UDP over
multicast, a connectionless network layer protocol, two-factor
authentication verification over RADIUS for a firewall VPN, PPP for
serial, an instant messaging protocol over Bluetooth, and many
others. Dave has been a key contributor to other full-stack product
implementations including Intel's Blue River Network appliance,
several complete public Internet applications in PHP,
JavaScript/Sails, and even VBScript. Dave has also worked on
smartcard security for banking and gaming applications ata startup,
Touch Technology. While at Motorola in 1992, Dave authored the
"Security Association Management Protocol" for the National
Security Agency, and subsequently spoke nationally about key
management and key management protocols. He has led clean-room
implementations for ISAKMP, IKEv2, and a custom network-keying
protocol. Dave's extensive experience in security, networking,
software and hardware is leveraged across a broad segment of
Intel’s Internet of Things to make Intel’s products and software
projects secure.
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