Mazen Azzam successfully defended his PhD thesis entitled ‘Physics-based Early Warnings for Forensic Readiness in Industrial Control Systems‘ on 30th May 2022. His external examiner was Prof. Ernesto Damiani, the internal examiner was Dr. Jim Buckley, with Prof. Brian Fitzgerald chairing the viva.

Similar Posts

WannaCry Highlights the Need for Engineering Forensic Ready Systems!
Are current systems ready to identify the cause of cyber attacks and apprehend the perpetrators? In his study, ‘Are You Ready? Towards the Engineering of Forensic-Ready Systems‘, George found that…

“Article of the Week”
The article “On the Automated Management of Security Incidents in Smart Spaces” was featured as the IEEE Access “Article of the Week”. In this article, the authors (Faeq Alrimawi, Liliana…

Faeq presents his poster at Research Day in NUI Galway
Faeq attended the “6th annual NUI Galway – University of Limerick Alliance Research Day” which took place on April 29th 2016 in the Analog building in UL. He submitted an…

Liliana Co-chairs SERF 2017
Liliana Pasquale co-chaired with Dr. Dalal Alrajeh (Imperial College London) the 1st International Workshop on Software Engineering and Digital Forensics (SERF 2017). The workshop was co-located with the 11th Joint…

Sorren Presents at SERF 2017
Sorren presented a paper on the ‘Use of Organisational Topologies for Forensic Investigations’ at the 1st International Workshop on Software Engineering and Digital Forensics (SERF) co-located with ESEC/FSE 2017. The…

“Article of the Week”
Our paper entitled “LiveBox: A Self-Adaptive Forensic-Ready Service for Drones” was featured as the IEEE Access “Article of the Week”. The work is a collaboration with our colleagues at the…