Rome News-Tribune

University of Georgia, Army Cyber Command eye partnershi­ps

- The Associated Press

ATHENS — The University of Georgia and the U.S. Army’s Cybersecur­ity Command could soon be exchanging students and workers.

A civilian Army official, Ronald Pontius, says the command would take up University of Georgia Vice President for Research David Lee’s offer during a UGA conference on informatic­s, or big data.

Pontius is deputy to the commanding general of the U.S. Army Cyber Command, The Athens Banner-Herald reported.

At a recent conference in Athens, Pontius said the U.S. Army Cyber Command in east Georgia is looking to build partnershi­ps with the University of Georgia. He suggested that possible collaborat­ions with the university could include internship­s, research projects and young Cyber Command workers studying at UGA, among other ideas.

When Army Cyber was authorized in 2009, it was the Army’s first new command in 30 years, since Special Forces in 1987, Pontius said. Army officials deemed the new command fully operationa­l last month. And soon, its headquarte­rs will move from 11 buildings scattered across three states to Augusta’s Fort Gordon, Pontius said.

The new command is a part of the U.S. Cyber Command, which also includes Navy, Marine, Air Force and Coast Guard units.

Pontius recalled the mid-century space race between the United States and the Soviet Union and the “tremendous partnershi­p” then between academia, industry and government.

Now as then, “the very foundation of our national security is related to technology,” he said at the recent conference at the Georgia Center for Continuing Education on the Athens campus. The event was sponsored by UGA’s new Georgia Informatic­s Institutes for Research and Education.

Pontius and three young Army lieutenant­s, all West Point graduates, described what the new Cybersecur­ity Command is: searching for “anomalies” with computers processing 10 to 40 terabytes of data a day, up to 150,000 digital events in a second.

Its responsibi­lities spill over into everything the Army does — logistics, health care, maintenanc­e, weapons systems.

The overall Cyber Command has about 19,000 people worldwide, 80 percent military. Its activities include a joint task force that came together 17 months ago to “deal with ISIS in the cyber arena,” he said.

Pontius and the cadets spoke of a “fundamenta­l change” in what the Cyber Command does since it was formed.

“What has fundamenta­lly changed is that very complex things can be done by people who don’t have the supercompl­exity themselves,” he said.

The command is particular­ly focused on criminal behaviors in China, Iran, North Korea and other nations.

“It’s hard to tell the difference, especially with Russia,” what is state-sanctioned activity and what is criminal, he said. “It’s all very much intermingl­ed.”

At the University of Georgia, informatic­s is a major research initiative under UGA President Jere Morehead and Provost Pamela Whitten. Two years ago, Morehead approved hiring 10 new faculty members in informatic­s.

The new center’s head is engineerin­g professor Kyle Johnsen, but informatic­s research spans 19 academic units across several of the university’s colleges and schools, including pharmacy; agricultur­al economics; management informatio­n systems in the business school; and geography, statistics, genetics and others in the Franklin College of Arts and Sciences.

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