Faculty
Joseph P. Bailey
Research Associate Professor, Decisions, Operations and Information Technologies
Robert H. Smith School of Business, University of Maryland
Dr. Bailey's research and teaching interests span issues in telecommunications,
economics, and public policy with an emphasis on the economics of the Internet.
This area includes an identification of the existing public policies, technologies,
and market opportunities that promote the benefits of interoperability. Bailey is
currently studying issues related to the economics of electronic commerce and how
the Internet changes competition and supply chain management.
He earned his PhD in Technology, Management and Policy, from the Massachusetts
Institute of Technology and his MS from Stanford University, Department of Engineering-Economic
Systems.
Dr. Bailey will teach Systems Thinking
and Design in the Cybersecurity Leadership Certificate Program.
Sandor Boyson
Research Professor and Co-Director, Supply Chain Management Center
Robert H. Smith School of Business, University of Maryland
Dr.
Boyson has significant expertise in technology management and supply chain
management, with over 20 years’ experience in strategic technology planning,
systems development/ management, and enterprise-wide process integration. During
2010-2012, he has been principal investigator and advisor to the National
Institute Of Standards and Technology, a key federal policymaker in
cybersecurity, on Information Communications Technology Supply Chain Risk
Management. He has served as a technology & strategy consultant to public
organizations as varied as the World Bank and the Department Of Defense; and
private sector organizations such as Allied Signal, Hughes Network Systems and
Avaya Corporation.
Dr. Boyson will teach ITC Supply Chain Risk Management and
Cybersecurity Leadership Capstone in
the Cybersecurity Leadership Certificate Program.
Michel Cukier
Associate Professor of Reliability Engineering with a joint appointment in the
Department of Mechanical Engineering and the Institute for Systems Research
University of Maryland
Dr. Cukier received a degree in physics engineering from the Free University
of Brussels, Belgium, in 1991, and a doctorate in computer science from the National
Polytechnic Institute of Toulouse, France, in 1996. From 1996 to 2001, he was a
researcher at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign. He joined the University
of Maryland in 2001 as Assistant Professor.
His research covers dependability and security issues. His latest research focuses
on the empirical quantification of computer security. He has published over 60 papers
in journals and refereed conference proceedings in those areas.
Dr. Cukier will teach Cybersecurity
Technology in the Cybersecurity Leadership Certificate Program.
William Greenwalt
Vice President, Acquisition Policy, Aerospace Industries Association;
former Director, Federal Acquisition Policy, Lockheed Martin Corporation;
former Deputy Undersecretary of Defense Industrial Policy, Office of the
Secretary of Defense,
The Pentagon, Washington, D.C. 2006-2009
Guest lecturer Bill Greenwalt is responsible for directing the development
and coordination of aerospace industry positions on acquisition, contract,
financial, tax, legal, intellectual property, environmental, safety and health
issues. Bill represents the aerospace industry before Congress, the executive
branch, the press and the public on acquisition and industrial base issues
including counterfeit parts, commercial-military integration, profit, cash flow
and payment policies, pensions, intellectual property, and other acquisition and
financial related topics. Formerly, as Deputy Director, Surveys and
Investigations, U.S. House of Representatives Appropriations Committee, Bill
managed a non-partisan committee staff reporting to the Chairman and Ranking
Member of the House Appropriations Committee that was responsible for the
completion of oversight, investigative and evaluative studies of issues and
programs of interest to the House Appropriations Committee. At Lockheed Martin,
Bill developed and implemented the Corporation’s strategy with respect to
government acquisition policy matters to include procurement, requirements,
budget, contracts, and acquisition management policies and processes for major
systems, technology development, services, information technology, logistics,
and rapid acquisition programs. At the Pentagon, Bill was principal advisor to
the Under Secretary of Defense (Acquisition, Technology & Logistics) on all
matters relating to the defense industrial base including foreign direct
investment (CFIUS) and mergers and acquisitions (Hart-Scott-Rodino) reviews.
Dan Reddy
Senior Consulting Product Manager – EMC Product Security Office, RSA Security
Division
EMC Corporation
Reddy leads the Supply Chain Assurance arm of the EMC Product Security Office
where he has been a champion for promoting product integrity and outlining product
requirements for Federal security compliance for the last five years. His 16-year
career at EMC has included a variety of security, IT and educational roles. He was
co-chair for SAFECode’s first whitepaper on Supply Chain Integrity Controls. He
is co-chair of the Open Group’s Trusted Technology Forum’s Global Outreach and Acquisition
workstream. He spent 15 years at New England Electric, a major utility with critical
national infrastructure where he held a variety of IT and business roles. He teaches
computer science at Quinsigamond Community College where he has taught for over
three decades. He graduated from Tufts University with an education degree and holds
two M. Ed. degrees from Worcester State College in education and computer science.
Mr. Reddy will teach Federal IT
Acquisition in the Cybersecurity Leadership Certificate Program.
Donald. R. Riley
Academic Director, Graduate Certificate of Professional Studies in Cybersecurity
Leadership
Professor of Information Systems, Department of Decisions, Operations and
Information Technology
Robert H. Smith School of Business, University of Maryland
Dr. Don Riley is a Professor of Information Systems in the Decision Information
Technologies division of the Robert H. Smith School of Business at the University
of Maryland. He is also Academic Director of the Graduate Certificate of Professional
Studies in Cybersecurity Leadership, working with faculty from the Business, Engineering
and Public Policy faculty to provide strategic, business-focused education for IT
and IS experts who seek general management opportunities. The program also welcomes
management generalists who seek an enhanced understanding of cyber risks and opportunities,
and a new means of collaborating with technical experts across their enterprise.
Dr. Riley is a former Chief Information Officer (CIO) at the University of Maryland,
College Park, and was charged with overseeing information technology planning and
coordination for the Campus information technology infrastructure: all major central
computing, telecommunications and networking infrastructure and services, including
academic, student and administrative computer services and instructional technology.
Dr. Riley was formerly faculty of the University of Minnesota Mechanical Engineering
Department. He has published over 100 refereed technical papers and several copyrighted
software packages for computer aided design; he has graduated multiple Master of
Science and Ph. D. students and looks forward to introducing Cybersecurity Leadership
students to the wealth of resources at the University of Maryland, College Park.
Min Wu
School of Electrical and Computer Engineering
A. James Clark School of Engineering, University of Maryland
Dr.
Min Wu received a B.E. degree in electrical engineering and a B.A. degree in
economics from Tsinghua University, Beijing, China, in 1996 (both with the
highest honors), and an M.S. degree and Ph.D. degree in electrical engineering
from Princeton University in 1998 and 2001, respectively. She was with NEC
Research Institute and Signafy, Inc. Princeton, NJ, in 1998, and with the Media
Security Group, Panasonic Information & Networking Laboratories, Princeton, NJ,
in 1999. Since fall 2001, she has been a faculty member of the Electrical and
Computer Engineering Department and the Institute of Advanced Computer Studies
(UMIACS) at University of Maryland, College Park. She is also affiliated with
the Institute of Systems Research (ISR) in the same university.
Wu's research interests include information security and forensics, and
multimedia signal processing and communications. She has published one book
"Multimedia Data Hiding" (Springer-Verlag, 2003) and about 65 refereed journal
and conference publications. She holds four U.S. patents on media security. She
is a member of the IEEE Technical Committee on Multimedia Signal Processing and
on Multimedia Systems and Applications. She has served as publicity chair for
2003 IEEE International Conference on Multimedia and Expo (ICME'03), finance
chair for 2007 IEEE International Conference on Acoustic, Speech, and Signal
Processing (ICASSP'07), and in the technical program committees of several
international conferences on multimedia, signal processing, communications, and
information security. She also co-edited a Special Issue on Multimedia Security
and Rights Management for EURASIP Journal of Applied signal Processing
in 2004.
She received an NSF Career award on information security and protection in
2002, and a George Corcoran Education Award from University of Maryland in 2003,
a 2004 Best Paper Award from the EURASIP Journal of Applied Signal
Processing, and a Young Investigator award on multimedia security and
forensics from U.S. Office of Naval Research in 2005. In 2004, she was selected
by the MIT Technology Review Magazine
as one of the 100 top young innovators whose contribution to emerging
technologies will profoundly influence the world.
Dr. Wu will teach Cybersecurity
Leadership Capstone in the Cybersecurity Leadership Certificate Program.