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Professor in Computer Science

Marco Carvalho

Marco Carvalho is a distinguished figure with an impressive track record in the realms of cybersecurity, artificial intelligence, and machine learning, boasting over 23 years of dedicated research experience. Currently serving as the Executive Director of the L3Harris Institute for Assured Information at Florida Institute of Technology, he plays a pivotal role in leading a team of researchers and faculty members engaged in cutting-edge projects. Their collective mission is to advance the state of the art in information assurance and cyber resilience. In addition to his role as an executive director, Marco is a tenured professor in computer science. His dedication extends to teaching and mentoring students while fostering innovation and excellence in engineering and science. His research interests span diverse domains, including distributed systems, Artificial Intelligence, Machine Learning, and cyber security, and he has made significant contributions through the authorship of multiple patents and publications in these areas. Marco Carvalho is a passionate advocate for solving complex problems and driving positive impact through research and education.

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Contributor Brief·Marco Carvalho · 2 articles
Updated Sep 27, 2023

Security demands breaking silos between technical and physical teams

Carvalho argues that device security cannot be solved through purely technical controls alone, but requires treating it as a socio-technical problem that demands organizational integration. He contends that accelerating technology convergence between IT and OT systems has made siloed security practices obsolete, necessitating structural breakdown between previously separate teams and operational domains.

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organizational silos causing interconnected security risks

Device security has to be treated as a socio-technical issue.

As Technology Convergence Accelerates (Software & Technology)

Technology domains requiring security integration

IT and OT technology convergence2
Technical teams requiring alignment2
Network types merging2

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33%IT and
IT and OT technology convergence
Technical teams requiring alignment
Network types merging

downstream effect

Technology evolution accelerating security strategy demands

Breaking down silos between technical teams and physical security operations addresses interconnected risks.

As Technology Convergence Accelerates (Pro AV)

Technology convergence between IT and OT has exacerbated the need for robust security.

As Technology Convergence Accelerates (Software & Technology)

Effective device security requires organizational integration, not just technical controls.

Themes:Socio-technical approach to securityIT-OT convergence as security driverOrganizational silos as vulnerability

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  • AM
    Alex M.·2h agoquestion

    What sparked your research into disruptive innovation?

    Curious what the original insight was that led you to the Innovator's Dilemma framework.

  • SL
    Sophia L.·1d agoidea

    Would love a deep-dive into EdTech adoption barriers.

    Your framing of sustaining vs. disruptive innovation feels directly applicable to school systems.

  • DR
    David R.·3d agoquestion

    How do you see AI changing the personalized learning landscape?