Title: Cyber Warfare. Preparing for the Inevitable
Venue: ICT Summit Eurasia, Istanbul, September 2012
Language: English
Duration: 45 minutes
Audience: Politics and defence industry
Abstract: Political and economical background information on cyber warfare
Title: Cyber-Physical Attacks and National Security
Venue: INSS International Conference on Cyberspace and National Security, Tel Aviv, September 2012
Language: English
Duration: 45 minutes
Audience: Cyber security experts and political advisors for national security
Abstract: A discussion of potential impacts of cyber-physical attacks on national security
Title: Stuxnet Attack Code Deep Dive
Venue: SCADA Security Scientific Symposium, Miami, January 2012
Language: English
Duration: 50 minutes + 10 minutes Q&A
Audience: ICS security experts
Abstract: In-depth technical discussion of Stuxnet’s attack code, including striking forensic evidence on attack target and strategy
Title: Destructive Cyber Weapons
Venue: Zurich Minds flagship event, Zurich, December 2011
Language: English
Duration: 18 minutes
Audience: CEOs and academia
Abstract: Big-picture explanation of cyber weapons and their potential impact
Title: Deterrence in cyberspace: Debating the right strategy
Venue: The Brookings Institution, Washington (DC), September 2011
Language: English
Duration: 1 hour debate + 20 minutes Q&A (audio only)
Audience: Military and political decision makers
Abstract: Ralph had challenged cybersecurity authority Dmitri Alperovitch to debate their opposing viewpoints on deterrence as a defense strategy in cyber warfare. Military strategist Peter Singer was kind enough to host and moderate the event at The Brookings Institution in front of a distinguished DC crowd which joins the discussion after the opening statements.
Title: The first deployed cyber weapon in history: Stuxnet’s architecture and implications
Venue: NATO’s International Conference on Cyber Conflict, Tallin (Estonia), June 2011
Language: English
Duration: 45 Minutes keynote + 15 minutes Q&A
Audience: Military and political decision makers
Abstract: A technical discussion of Stuxnet’s payload, followed by a big-picture analysis of the implications for cyber warfare
Title: Anatomie des Stuxnet-Wurms
Venue: TNG Big Tech Day, Munich, May 2011
Language: German
Duration: 50 minutes + 15 minutes Q&A
Audience: IT experts, software engineers
Abstract: Technical explanation of Stuxnet for an IT crowd
Title: Cracking Stuxnet, a 21st century cyber weapon
Venue: TED Conference, Long Beach, March 2011
Language: English; subtitles in 29 languages
Duration: 10 Minutes
Audience: Everybody
Abstract: The first explanation of Stuxnet for a general audience. With over 700,000 views, this is the most popular talk on Stuxnet ever.





