Speakers

Kavé Salamatian

Kavé Salamatian is a full professor of computer science at University of Savoie. His main areas of researches has been Internet measurement and modeling, network security, and networking information theory. He was previously reader at Lancaster University, UK and associate professor at University Pierre et Marie Curie. Kavé has graduated in 1998 from Paris SUD-Orsay university where he worked on joint source channel coding applied to multimedia transmission over Internet for his Phd. In a former life, he graduated with a MBA, and worked on market floor as a risk analyst and enjoyed being an urban traffic modeler for some years. He is currently distinguished visiting professor at the Chines Academy of Science and also working closely with the Castex CyberStrategy Chair at the French National Defense Institute. He has been the recipient of a Chinese academy of Science Presidential Award in 2018. More


Sue Moon

Sue Moon received her B.S. and M.S. from Seoul National University, Seoul, Korea, in 1988 and 1990, respectively, all in computer engineering. She received a Ph.D. degree in computer science from the University of Massachusetts at Amherst in 2000. From 1999 to 2003, she worked in the IPMON project at Sprint ATL in Burlingame, California. In August of 2003, she joined KAIST and now teaches in Daejeon, Korea. More


Andra Lutu

Andra's research revolves around measuring, analyzing and improving how mobile operators join mobility and communications towards the common goal of offering subscribers performance and efficiency in highly dynamic scenarios. Wireless and mobile access to the Internet revolutionized the way that people interact and access information. Mobile broadband networks have become the key infrastructure for people to stay connected everywhere they go and while on the move. Indeed, mobile coverage and performance experienced by the end-users are of great importance to many stakeholders, including mobile subscribers, regulators, governments, businesses that provide Internet services and public transport operators. The society’s increased reliance on mobile networks has made provisioning ubiquitous coverage the highest priority target to achieve for mobile network operators before focusing on performance and user quality of experience.. More


Gareth Tyson

Dr Gareth Tyson is a lecturer and Internet Data Scientist at Queen Mary University of London. Prior to this he worked at King's College London and Lancaster University, as well as holding visiting positions at University College London and Cambridge Computer Lab. His work takes a data-driven approach to understanding and solving emerging challenges in Internet systems. He tends to sit at the intersection between traditional systems design (i.e. understanding technology) and social computing (i.e. understanding humans). By collecting, compiling and combining empirical insights on these two things, he strives to improve the online security and performance for both humans and technology alike. More

Dongman Lee

Dongman Lee (M’04) received the B.S. degree in computer engineering from Seoul National University, Seoul, Korea, in 1982, and the M.S. and Ph.D. degrees in computer science from Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology (KAIST), Daejeon, Korea, in 1984 and 1987, respectively.,From 1988 to 1997, he worked as a Technical Contributor with Hewlett-Packard. From 1998 to 2009, he was a Professor with the School of Engineering, Information and Communications University (ICU), Daejeon, Korea. Since 2009, he has been a Professor with the Department of Computer Science, KAIST, and Director of the Urban Computing Research Center. His research interests include distributed systems, computer networks, mobile computing and pervasive computing.,Dr. Lee is a Senior Member of the Association for Computing Machinery (ACM).More