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4. HCS Research Agenda Development |
HCS Research Agenda Development This brainstorming session began with additional context setting. The NCO representative provided organizational background information on the CIC HCS effort and where it fits in with other CIC Program Component Areas. It was suggested that, in the course of setting the HCS research agenda, a document like the NGI Implementation Plan (NGI IP) be produced (the NGI IP took a little over a year to complete). Proposed research issues that might be included in such a document were mentioned (e.g., open systems, cost reduction, integration across technologies and applications) along with organizational/operational issues related to the HCS research agenda (e.g., role of the Federal government, individual agency roles, multi-agency coordination). To further set the context, a short presentation on NSA's perspective of researching high confidence in INFOSEC systems was provided. NSA has moved away from the old world Government-off-the-shelf (GOTS) approach to assurance (i.e., government control, lots of effort placed on assurance because systems are in the field for a long time, high quality secure products). It is moving towards the new world commercial-off-the-shelf (COTS) approach to assurance (i.e., government has no control, little effort is invested in assurance because of short product life cycles, layered security). The main problems with assurance are finding and keeping experts and needing tools that have assurance built into them. Five "Pillars for Success" were identified as potential starting points for our brainstorming (fundamental property research, design tools, administration tools, composition, and education). Additionally, six "Stretch Goals" (reduce credit card interest, safeguard children in cyberspace, privacy of consumer transactions, decrease system intrusions, eliminate junk email, and dominate the electronic battlespace) were identified. The Executive Secretary of the HCS Working Group proposed a strawman HCS vision and a set of technology research goals for 2010: Vision High Confidence Systems research will produce a body of knowledge and a set of tools that will promote safe, reliable, dependable, secure, and survivable computing systems. Achieving high confidence systems will enable a world radically different and much improved from the world of today in providing for the general welfare of the public and meeting key performance goals of Federal agencies. HCS Technology Research 2010 Goals
The brainstorming began with the moderator pointing out that the group needed to get to clear, concise goals established to convey the research agenda to the Administration, Congress, and the public in a way that all could understand almost immediately. With that perspective, it was suggested that the group identify the problem(s) first, in a way that the average person can understand (e.g., delivery of government services); otherwise, the group's output would be a solution chasing a problem. Once again, there was some discussion about the role of research related to standards. There also was a question about the scope of the research agenda:
A number or slides were developed as the group brainstormed ideas and how to structure them. Three slides were developed at the end of the afternoon to capture the group's thoughts at that point on high level goals that might convey the importance of HCS:
The Workshop Chair closed the meeting by thanking everyone for their contributions and by encouraging increased participation in the HCS Working Group. |
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