Computing Reviews
Today's Issue Hot Topics Search Browse Recommended My Account Log In
Browse by topic Browse by titles Authors Reviewers Browse by issue Browse Help
Search
 
Weippl, Edgar
SBA Research
Vienna, Austria
 
   Featured Reviewer
   Reader Recommended
   Reviewer Selected
   Highlighted
Follow this Reviewer
 
 
 

Edgar R. Weippl holds a MS and a Ph.D. in Computer Science, and an MA in Business Administration. He has taught courses on computer security at the University of Linz (Austria), The Polytechnic University (Hagenberg, Austria), Beloit College (Wisconsin, USA) and the University of Vienna (Austria).

His general areas of interest are security and e-learning. Specifically, his work focuses on security in e-learning (http://www.e-learning-security.org). E-learning can be considered as a special form of e-business. The good involved is digital content that has to be distributed, maintained, and updated. Moreover, the value of this good has to be adequately protected from unauthorized use and modification, without preventing students from using it in a flexible way.

The goal of Weippl's research is to analyze the requirements of using e-learning content, which emerge from both the technical interactions between systems and the social interactions of individual students and faculty. The complexity of such cooperative systems often necessitates new methodological and theoretical directions, encompassing both technically sound solutions and user-centered design.

When trying to increase user acceptance, a standard approach taken by many e-learning researchers and vendors is to incorporate interactivity and to improve multimedia capabilities of the system. Although these features may contribute to the success of e-learning systems, Weippl considers security as the crucial part when it comes to enhancing user acceptance. The reason why security can be seen as an enabling technology in this context is that people often refrain from using systems that they do not trust. When analyzing the requirements of security in complex cooperative systems, he has drawn data from the risk analysis of several previous projects touching this issue. The goal of security in e-learning is to protect authors' e-learning content from copyright infringements, to protect teachers from students who may undermine their evaluation system by cheating, and to protect students from being too closely monitored by their teachers when using the software. Since these intertwined requirements are not met by existing systems, new approaches are needed.

Scholarly activities such as giving tutorials at renowned conferences (for instance, ED-MEDIA) and serving as a reviewer for scientific journals (including IEEE Internet, where he was mentioned as an outstanding reviewer in 2000,) play a major role in Weippl's daily work. He also serves on the editorial board of JISE.

Currently, Weippl is creating a chapter on security in e-learning in a multi-university e-learning project (http://www.planet-et.at). He has presented tutorials at various conferences, and actively participates in the scientific community. Previously, he worked for three years in a non-profit research organization focusing on security.

Weippl spends his leisure time exploring underwater worlds with his scuba diving wife Kathrin, and--like many Austrians-- skiing and snowboarding in the Alps.

 
 
Options:
Date Reviewed  
 
1
- 3 of 3 reviews

   
  Obfuscation: a user’s guide for privacy and protest
Brunton F., Nissenbaum H., The MIT Press, Cambridge, MA, 2015. 136 pp.  Type: Book (978-0-262029-73-5)

On its first page, the book makes a strong point about wanting to start a revolution: “not a big revolution--at least, not at first.” Throughout the book, the authors explore how obfuscation has been, is, a...

May 20 2016  
  Exploiting online games: cheating massively distributed systems (Addison-Wesley Software Security Series)
Hoglund G., McGraw G., Addison-Wesley Professional, 2007.  Type: Book (9780132271912)

Cheating in online games has become very widespread; game makers have only recently started to find effective ways to make cheating hard. This book is about the mistakes that were made so that we can all benefit and learn how to avoid ...

Jun 27 2008  
   Detecting unusual email communication
Keila P., Skillicorn D.  Collaborative research (Proceedings of the 2005 Conference of the Centre for Advanced Studies on Collaborative Research, Toronto, Ontario, Canada, Oct 17-20, 2005) 117-125, 2005.  Type: Proceedings

Keila and Skillicorn present an interesting study in which they analyze 500,000 emails of Enron employees. This large corpus of emails is freely available for download at http://www.cs.cmu.edu/~enron/. Building on previous research, th...

Jun 21 2006  
 
 
   
Send Your Comments
Contact Us
Reproduction in whole or in part without permission is prohibited.   Copyright 1999-2024 ThinkLoud®
Terms of Use
| Privacy Policy