Monday
May 1
4:00 - 4:50pm
Kelley 1001

 

Carlos Jensen
Assistant Professor
School of EECS
Oregon State University

 

 

Putting the ‘Trust’ in Trustworthy Computing

 

This talk will examine the concept of trustworthy computing from the perspective of the skeptical end-user. We will examine the concept of trust, and how this is, or is not being applied to trustworthy computing today. Specifically, we will examine why trustworthy computing fails to gain trust, and the roadblocks we face in transitioning what I call ‘faith-based’ computing.

 

 

Biography:

 

Carlos Jensen is an Assistant Professor in the School of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science at the Oregon State University. His research is in the usability of privacy and security; developing new analysis, visualization, and interface techniques to build awareness and support users in making better decisions. As part of this work, Jensen studies users’ mental models and understanding of privacy and security, as well as the tradeoffs they make. Jensen is also leading an effort to index, analyze, and visualize website data-practices on a large scale in order to automatically classify sites, detect data-sharing networks, and evaluate the impact of regulation.

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