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Plenary Lecture

Intrusion and Countermeasures in Secure Advanced Optical Networks



Professor Stamatios Kartalopoulos
University of Oklahoma,
USA
Email: kartalopoulos@ou.edu
 

Abstract: Optical networks are considered to be intrusion-resistant by virtue of the fiber medium. The common belief is that the optical fiber is difficult to tap, as compared to copper wire and to wireless media. In fact, this is a simplistic view because stripping a cable and tapping a fiber with tools that are commercially available is a relatively simple task to the sophisticated intruder. Moreover, because the fiber link is many kilometers long, the fiber cannot be guarded; this presents a tremendous opportunity and flexibility to the intruder to select the point of intrusion unnoticed. Therefore, it is important that the network is sophisticated enough to monitor and detect intrusions, differentiate from possible component failure and degradation, and upon detection of fiber attacks, it executes automatic countermeasures, outsmarting the intruder. In this talk, we describe automatic intrusion detection methods and countermeasure strategies in modern optical networks.


Brief Biography of the Speaker:
Stamatios V. Kartalopoulos, PhD, is currently the Williams Professor in Telecommunications Networking with the University of Oklahoma. His research emphasis is on optical communication networks (long haul, FSO, and FTTH), optical technology including signal performance sensors, optical metamaterials, as well as chaotic processes, optical network security, including quantum networks and chaotic quantum cryptography. Prior to this, he was with Bell Laboratories where he defined, led and managed research and development teams in the areas of DWDM networks, SONET/SDH and ATM, Cross-connects, Switching, Transmission and Access systems. He has received the President’s Award and many awards of Excellence.
Dr Kartalopoulos holds nineteen patents related to communications networks and technology, and he has published more than hundred fifty scientific papers, nine reference textbooks, and has also contributed chapters to other books.
He has been an IEEE and a Lucent Technologies Distinguished Lecturer and has lectured at international Universities, at NASA and conferences,. He has been keynote speaker of major international conferences, has moderated executive forums, has been a panelist of interdisciplinary panels, and has organized symposia, workshops and sessions at major international communications conferences.
Dr Kartalopoulos is an IEEE Fellow, chair and founder of the IEEE ComSoc Communications & Information Security Technical Committee, member at large of IEEE New Technologies Directions Committee, and he has served as editor-in-chief of IEEE Press, chair of ComSoc Emerging Technologies and of SPCE Technical Committees, Area-editor of IEEE Communications Magazine/Optical Communications, member of IEEE PSPB, and VP of IEEE Computational Intelligence Society.

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