High Tech Hawaii Discusses Network Security, Communities and Consequences

University of Hawaiʻi
Contact:
Shawn Nakamoto, (808) 956-9095
University & Community Relations
Kristen Cabral, (808) 956-5039
University & Community Relations
Posted: Sep 24, 2001

"High Tech Hawaiʻi," a live monthly call-in show produced by the University of Hawaiʻi to shed light on high technology activities within the state, will air on Tuesday, September 25, from 7:30 to 8:30 p.m. The topic will be "Network Security, Communities and Consequences."

Host David Lassner, Director of Information Technology for the University of Hawaiʻi, will be joined by guests Chris Duque, Detective and Cybercrime Specialist for the Honolulu Police Department; Jodi Ito, Information Security Officer for the University of Hawaiʻi; Clifton Royston, Senior Systems Architect for Lavanet; and Christopher Young, Deputy Attorney General for the State of Hawaiʻi.

Lassner and his guests from the worlds of law enforcement and network service provisions will discuss NIMDA, one of the most potentially virulent network attacks ever, which was unleashed on the Internet on September 18. They will also discuss network security, recommended practices for safe computing, what the law says, and how to cope in an ever-more complex world of shared networks.

The show is webcast live and can be seen on PEG Access cable channels throughout the state as well as on Verizon Americast. On Oʻahu cable it is aired live on Oceanic Channel 55, on Hawaiʻi Cable Channel 54 and on Americast Channel 21. It is available on Maui and Kauaʻi live via webcast using RealPlayer or on a tape-delayed basis on PEG Access cable channels. The webcast is available at http://www.hawaii.edu/dl/hth.During the live airing of the program, questions may be called in to 956-5670 or 1-800-342-7949 (neighbor islands), or sent by email to hth@hawaii.edu.

Now in it‘s fifth year of production, previous High Tech Hawaiʻi shows have highlighted topics such as Y2K, the prospects for high technology in IT education and training, data centers in Hawaiʻi, wireless telecom regulation, electronic commerce, telemedicine, distance learning, assistive technologies for the disabled and the Pacific Telecommunications Council.