Forum on
Financial Systems and Cyber Security
Attracts Experts from Around the
Globe
The
information revolution has not only
introduced new technologies, but has
also changed the way business is
conducted. Economic transactions
increasingly take place via digital
networks, and a critical part of this
interconnectivity is the way
organizations have integrated accounting
and financial management systems with
Internet-based applications. In order to
help form the debate concerning the
relations among financial systems, cyber
security, and public policy, the
Journal of Accounting and Public Policy
initiated the first forum on the topic,
"Financial Systems and Cyber Security: A
Public Policy Perspective." The forum
was hosted by the University of
Maryland's Robert H. Smith School of
Business, in cooperation with the Center
for Public Policy and Private Enterprise
(from the University of Maryland's
School of Public Affairs), on May 28,
2004 and drew over 30 academicians and
subject matter experts from universities
across the globe.
During the program, speakers
presented research papers concerning
various related topics including
Extensible Markup Language's (XML) role
in information security on the Internet,
the feasibility of cyber security in
Japanese e-local government, and
increased cyber security for national
market systems. Scheduled discussants
offered comments in response to the
research that both supported and
challenged the results, while providing
useful insight on how to improve the
papers. Lawrence A. Gordon, Ernst &
Young Alumni Professor of Managerial
Accounting and Information Assurance,
forum co-chair, and Smith's PhD program
director, states, "This forum leverages
the Smith School's leadership in
research related to the digital economy
by bringing together leading scholars
working on issues related to financial
systems and cyber security."
Other
conference organizers included Professor
Martin Loeb, Deloitte & Touche LLP
Faculty Fellow at Smith, and William
Lucyshyn, a director at the Defense
Advanced Research Projects Agency
(DARPA) and a Visiting Senior Research
Scholar at Maryland's Center for Public
Policy and Private Enterprise.
Dean Howard Frank kicked off the
forum with some welcoming remarks, which
highlighted the importance of the
forum's research focus and Smith
School's role as a leader in the field.
The Honorable Jacques Gansler, former
Under Secretary of Defense, and now
acting Dean of the School of Public
Affairs and incoming VP for Research at
the University, gave a talk during the
luncheon on improving the security of
financial management systems. Kim Smith,
currently the visiting academic fellow
at the SEC, and professor at the College
of William and Mary, spoke at the Ira
Shapiro Dinner talk on the topic of
security through disclosure.
Featured
speakers at the daytime sessions
included Hideyuki Tanaka and Kanta
Matsuura, who traveled from Japan's
premier institute of higher learning,
the University of Tokyo. Their research,
entitled "Vulnerability and Information
Security Investment: An Empirical
Analysis of E-Local Government of
Japan," provided useful support for
Gordon and Loeb's earlier theoretical
model regarding the relation between
optimal information security investment
levels and the vulnerability of
information.
"The one-day forum was a big success
and our plan is to make it an annual
event here at Smith," says Gordon.
For more information about the forum,
visit:
http://www.cpppe.umd.edu/Calendar/Conferences/FSC/index.html