Admission requirements
Admission only after intake, see website of the Cyber Security Academy.
Description
Aiming to avoid overlap with other courses (elective as well as mandatory courses) that are taught later in the curriculum, the content of this course is limited to the introductory stage. It seeks to offer students an understanding of the basic concepts in relation to cyber security. For that reason this course places cyber security into a broader context and zooms out to study the notions that make up that broader context. Subsequently, the course zooms in to discuss the content of the notion cyber security, the security questions that it entails and how these are dealt with. Why is cyber security a security issue? And what kind of security issue is it then? The following topics are included.
The course starts by discussing the meaning and the definitions of safety and security including the different types of harm, before the meaning and the definition of cyber security is studied. The latter is placed into the larger perspective of what cyberspace entails but also the context of safety and security is brought into this picture. Relations between safety, security, cyber security and cyberspace are explored in depth.
In a next step, the course zooms out to the concept of uncertainty. The possible responses to (or ways of dealing with) uncertainty include regulation. Special attention will therefore be paid to regulation and how this relates to cyber security. The notion and functioning of cyber norms completes this introduction into cyber security governance.
In a third step, the course zooms in on the governance of ICT systems – including critical infrastructures – and the Internet. The actors that play a role in governing ICT systems and the Internet and the questions and discussions that rise in this context are touched upon. The human factor in the context of cyber security is examined by discussing attackers, defenders and end-users, their motives and their roles. In that same respect, the rule of law and its relevance to cyber security, cyber economics and cyber terrorism are covered. Throughout the course, students will reflect on the technical and the legal questions raised in the context of cyber security, such as the confidentiality, integrity and availability (the traditional CIA triad) of data or systems, privacy, jurisdiction, encryption, disinformation and misinformation.
Course objectives
When finalizing this course successfully, participants will have:
basic knowledge & understanding of what cyber security means and how it relates to the notions of (un)certainty, safety and security;
basic knowledge & understanding of the different types of harm and the different responses to uncertainty;
basic knowledge & understanding of the complex technical and the governance related issues that surface in the context of cyber security;
basic knowledge & understanding of how the Internet is governed, how ICT systems and critical infrastructures in particular are governed and who the stakeholders are;
When finalizing this course successfully, participants will be able to:
identify whether cyber incidents are a safety or a security issue and explain why;
identify different forms of dealing with uncertainty;
analyze complex cyber security problems and link them to relevant theories, concepts and methods from different disciplines;
construct and articulate scientific arguments about the technical and governance related issues for cyber security and identify current discussions and relevant interests in this context.
Timetable
7 days from 9.30 until 17.00 in April and May 2020.
Mode of instruction
Lectures, seminars, exercises, class discussion
Lecturers: Dr. Els De Busser, Prof. Dr. Bibi van den Berg, Dr. Tommy van Steen, Daan Weggemans, and others
Course Load
5 EC
Assessment method
Assignment 1 (30%)
Assignment 2 (30%)
Written exam (40%)
Only assessments with the weight of 30% and lower are compensable. This means that one does not have to pass an assessment if it weighs 30% or less in order to pass the course, if the average of all assessments combined is at least a 5.5. In addition, assignments weighing up to and including 30% are not re-sitable, meaning that if one failed an assessment of 30% or less one is not allowed to redo it and that assessment must be compensated by the other assessment(s).
The resit will take the same form.
Blackboard
Yes, for posting announcements, slides of lectures, relevant literature and assignments.
Reading list
Compulsory literature and literature for further consultation will be announced via Blackboard.
Registration
No registration is required for lectures and exams.
Contact
Remarks
For more information see the website of the Cyber Security Academy.