Jeffrey Carr
Jeffrey Carr is a cybersecurity analyst and expert.[1] He lives in Seattle, Washington.[2] He is founder and CEO of Taia Global.[3] He is also the founder and principal investigator of Project Grey Goose, an open-source investigation into cyber conflicts including the Russian cyber attacks on Georgia, the Indian Eastern Railway website defacement, and the Israeli-Hamas war in 2008 to 2009.[4] He is also a government contractor who is consulted on Russian and Chinese cyber warfare strategy and tactics.[1]
Expertise
- Cyberwarfare
- Cyber self-defense
- Cyber intelligence
- Cyber espionage
- Cybersecurity particularly state and non-state hackers[1]
Career
Jeffrey Carr founded Project Grey Goose on August 22, 2008. Both parts one and two of Project Grey Goose are available online.[5] Project Grey Goose was converted into Greylogic, a consulting company which provides information services to governments, in 2009.[5] Jeffrey Carr founded Taia Global in 2011. Taia Global provides cybersecurity consulting, due diligence investigations, and assists client companies with identifying their high value digital assets.[6]
Public life
Lectures
Jeffrey Carr has lectured on cyber-security issues at the Defense Intelligence Agency, U.S. Army War College, Air Force Institute of Technology, NATO’s CCDCOE Conference on Cyber Conflict, and DEF CON.[1] Many news sites have quoted him including the New York Times, Washington Post, The Guardian, BusinessWeek, WMD Insights, The Industry Standard, Info Security News[7] Parameters, and Wired.[8]
Publications
Jeffrey Carr was the author of the Intelfusion Blog until September 1, 2010. He also wrote for The Firewall, a cybersecurity blog at Forbes until Feb 13, 2011.[9] when he left to start his own blog Digital Dao [10] He also wrote the book Inside Cyber Warfare which was published on December 15, 2009.[11] The book documents cyber conflicts from 2002 until 2009.[11] Both General Kevin P. Chilton, Commander USSTRATCOM and his Chief of Staff MG Abraham J. Turner have endorsed this book.[12]
References
- ^ a b c d "Jeffrey Carr". O'Reilly Media. Retrieved 3 November 2016.
- ^ "Russia’s Silicon Valley Dreams May Threaten Cybersecurity", Centre for Counterintelligence and Security Studies News, 15 November 2010 <retrieved on February 10, 2011>
- ^ Taia Global, https://taiaglobal.com/
- ^ "12th Annual 2009 NYS Cyber Security Conference", New York State: Office of Cyber Security.
- ^ a b "Cyber Warfare: Project Grey Goose Phase II Report on INDIA". 28 March 2009. Retrieved 8 April 2012.
- ^ Taia Global Inc, https://taia.global/ <accessed on August 1, 2016>
- ^ 12th Annual 2009 NYS Cyber Security Conference, New York State: Office of Cyber Security, http://www.cscic.state.ny.us/security/conferences/security/2009/call.cfm
- ^ O'Reilly Radar, http://radar.oreilly.com/jeffc/ <accessed on February 10, 2011>
- ^ Forbes, http://www.forbes.com/sites/jeffreycarr/#7a516d094e71
- ^ http://jeffreycarr.blogspot.com/
- ^ a b Library of Congress. "Inside cyber warfare". Library of Congress. Retrieved 8 April 2012.
- ^ Carr, Jeffrey. "About Me". Forbes. Retrieved 8 April 2012.
External links
- Website: jeffreycarr.com