session 2
Cyber-based security threats to space missions: establishing the legal, institutional and collaborative framework to counteract them
- type
oral
- Description
The increasingly pervasive network connectivity following the Internet explosion introduces a whole new families of cyber-security threats to space missions. To send commands to a spacecraft now you would not need to build a ground station, but you can penetrate from your home or office the existing ground infrastructures, bypassing their protection measures, from anywhere in the world. The questions to be addressed in the session will span across the following issues: - What is the interest of cyber-crime and cyber-activism with respect to space activities? - How are aerospace organisations managing the ability to introduce the right level of security measures in the process to plan and develop new missions? - What legal and protection framework is or has to be put in place to enable secure cooperation across corporate and international boundaries? - How is knowledge about security threats captured, shared, and used to follow the evolution of cyber threats? - Which ones of these specific threats are to be expected to target space missions, from the ground and from space? - What is particularly to be expected from the cyber-space to target outer space? Contribution are expected to focus on cyber-specific legislation, best practices, processes, collaboration methods between law enforcement and institutional partners, and any other aspects of the organization of space missions that are all constituting the formal components to keep a mission “cyber secure”.
- Date
2024-10-14
- Time
- Room
- IPC members
Co-Chair: Mr. Julien Airaud, Centre National d'Etudes Spatiales (CNES), France;
Co-Chair: Mr. Stefano Zatti, University of Rome “La Sapienza”, Italy;
Order | Time | Paper title | Mode | Presentation status | Speaker | Affiliation | Country |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 15:30 | 12 | confirmed | Ms. Clémence Poirier | The Center for Security Studies (CSS) at ETH Zurich | Switzerland | |
2 | 15:42 | How about a cybersecurity framework tailored to space activities? | 12 | confirmed | Mr. Marceau Brigant | Eutelsat | France |
3 | 15:54 | protecting space assets: cybersecurity imperatives for future missions | 12 | confirmed | Mr. Pietro Santoriello | Partners4Innovation | Italy |
4 | 16:06 | Space Crime: A Basis for International Law to Criminalize Cyber Interference of Space Activities | 12 | confirmed | Mr. George Anthony Long | United States | |
5 | 16:18 | 12 | confirmed | Ms. Niki Giannakou | National and Kapodistrian University Of Athens | Greece | |
6 | 16:30 | AI in Space: Potential, Challenges, and the Importance of Regulatory Guidelines | 12 | confirmed | Mr. Luca Ricci | Space Generation Advisory Council (SGAC) | Italy |
7 | 16:42 | 12 | confirmed | Ms. Niki Giannakou | National and Kapodistrian University Of Athens | Greece | |
8 | 16:54 | 12 | confirmed | Ms. Laura Morelli | International Space University (ISU) | Italy | |
9 | 17:06 | 10 | confirmed | Ms. Maria Angeliki Gerasimou | National and Kapodistrian University Of Athens | Greece | |
10 | 17:16 | 12 | confirmed | Mr. Peter Franke | Telespazio Germany GmbH | Germany | |
11 | 17:28 | Cybersecurity Measures in Modern Space Exploration and Azerbaijan's Role | 10 | confirmed | Mr. Sadig Jafarov | 3I3S - Cybersecurity | Azerbaijan |
12 | 17:38 | Start with the Right Requirements: A First-Principles Approach for Cyber Secure Space Missions | 10 | confirmed | Dr. Bruce Chesley | Teaching Science and Technology, Inc (TSTI) | United States |