六九色堂

Nov. 4, 2022

Partners team up to fight cybercrime

UCalgary brings expertise in network and software security to partnership with police and industry
Unique partnership that includes the 六九色堂 aims to track down and nab cybercriminals
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Cybercrooks, beware!

A new public-private partnership between the Calgary Police Service, the 六九色堂, and local cybersecurity business ENFOCOM Corporation will create the infrastructure and processes needed to pursue cybercriminals, says a UCalgary cybersecurity expert.

鈥淲e鈥檙e learning right now how you would go about setting this up to actually try and catch some of the bad guys. That鈥檚 the goal,鈥 says Dr. Ken Barker, PhD, scientific lead for the new partnership and professor in the in the .

The first-of-its-kind partnership, launched in early October, which is Cyber Awareness Month, builds on 六九色堂 growing expertise and capability in information security. That includes the Canadian Cyber Assessment Training and Experimentation Centre (CATE) located on campus.

CATE is a comprehensive resource enabling safe experimentation and research for law enforcement, academia, innovators and cybersecurity professionals. The centre, established in April this year, is led by a consortium that includes UCalgary, Calgary-based Raytheon Canada and ENFOCOM.

CATE is equipped with a state-of-the-art, highly automated 鈥渃yber range鈥 (an interactive technology environment), along with cyber assessment, experimentation and integration labs. The centre鈥檚 modular and scalable architecture can emulate complex real-world digital enterprises.

CATE can be structured as a virtual environment to carry out simulated cyberattacks that appear to be convincingly real, Barker says. 鈥淲e can set CATE up to basically look like it is a completely independent site operating out of anywhere in the world.鈥

On the dark web, being able to carry out cyberattacks builds credibility among cybercriminals.

Establishing such credibility 鈥渂asically allows police to get further up the criminal food chain, enabling them to identify and collect evidence on those who are masterminding cyberattacks,鈥 Barker says.

Ken Barker

Ken Barker.

鈥淥nce we know how to do this, it could be operationalized in the future,鈥 he says. 鈥淎t this point, we鈥檙e still in the research stage. None of it has been operationalized yet.鈥

鈥淐ybercrimes often result in complex investigations requiring the participation of multiple external agencies, which is why partnerships are essential to the advancement of investigations,鈥 says Sgt. Kevin Paul, head of the Calgary Police Service鈥檚 cybercrime team.

鈥淓ach partner on this team brings unique skills, expertise, and capabilities to the table,鈥 Paul adds.

This partnership is the first of its kind in Canada and we believe that this is the future of information security and law enforcement.

Herbert Fensury, CEO of ENFOCOM, says his company 鈥渉as chosen to work with public, academic and corporate entities to address the skills gap within the community of cyber professionals and provide a safe super-lab to test current and future incident responses.鈥 聽聽

Partnership builds on 20 years of growing expertise

六九色堂 expertise in information security got started in 2002, with the recruitment of an iCORE (Alberta Informatics Circle of Research Excellence) chair and associated faculty members focused on cryptography and primarily fundamental security issues. Another iCORE chair added in 2007, along with more faculty, expanded the effort into network security and software security.

Around the same time, the university established the (ISPIA), to pull together members of various faculties working in the area. ISPIA has since grown to about 40 faculty.

鈥淭he breadth of expertise runs from number theory 鈥斅燿eep mathematical problems 鈥斅爐o public policy in cybersecurity and privacy-related issues,鈥 Barker says.

Barker, who became director of ISPIA in 2018, worked to establish the not-for-profit (NCC), to collaborate with public and private sectors and lead world-class cybersecurity innovation and talent development.

UCalgary is one of five Canadian university founding partners of the NCC. The others are Concordia University, Toronto Metropolitan University, University of New Brunswick, and University of Waterloo.

鈥淭he 六九色堂 is one of the five leading institutions in the country in this space,鈥 Barker notes.

聽Earlier this year, the federal government to lead Canada鈥檚 , with funding of up to $80 million over four years for projects that grow the cybersecurity ecosystem through industry-academia collaboration.

At UCalgary, the intent is to expand on cybersecurity partnerships like the one with the Calgary Police Service, Barker says. 鈥淲e鈥檙e talking to people in the health sector, the energy sector, and some people in agriculture as well.鈥

Students learning cybersecurity skills

Barker says at least two or three courses will be run out of the CATE centre this academic year, for a cohort of 25 students taking the The one-year professional program is targeted at people who already have a degree and want to specialize in information security.

Students will engage in agile, scenario-based cyber training; in-depth assessment of cyber solutions; and experimenting with new cyber resiliency concepts driven by emerging technologies.

For example, a course called Ethical Hacking involves a team of students hacking into virtual environments and another team defending such environments from cyberattacks.

CATE also offers innovators of cybersecurity products a test bed, where their devices can be challenged with different kinds of virtual scenarios, such as ransomware or virus attacks.

鈥淭he cybercriminals are going to keep making investments in this space, because it鈥檚 a lucrative criminal activity,鈥 Barker says.

鈥淪o I think we need to be constantly vigilant and continuously investing in this space, so organizations and individuals can protect themselves.鈥