(BRIEF) The Dutch government has earmarked a very significant investment in the “Cybersecurity Challenges” project, recognising the critical need for coordinated clinical studies in cybersecurity. Led by Professor Tanja Lange from TU/e, the project aims to solve major cybersecurity issues. bringing together a team of more than thirty sensible researchers from various disciplines. Minister Dijkgraaf underlines the importance of these investments, highlighting their role in maintaining the Netherlands’ clinical leadership and promoting innovation with long-term benefits for society and the economy. This initiative underlines the Dutch government’s commitment to addressing urgent and demanding societal situations through state-of-the-art research and innovation.
(PRESS RELEASE) EINDHOVEN, March 25, 2024 — /EuropaWire/ — Cybersecurity is presented as a factor of schooling or lack of resources, blaming users, formula managers or budget managers for restricting the formula’s control capabilities. However, many difficult disorders remain unresolved because they require coordinated clinical trials. The “Challenges in Cybersecurity” commission brings together the most productive researchers in the hard sciences in the field of cybersecurity. According to Minister Dijkgraaf (Education, Culture and Science), this places the studios among the “most productive scientists in the world”, so the mission will get a really big grant from NWO Gravitation.
“Challenges in Cyber Security” is one of seven studio papers that won an NWO Gravitation Fellowship this year, with an impressive €9,932,919. As a component of this work, a team of more than thirty cybersecurity scholars is in a position to rebuild cybersecurity on a large scale. New forged base. Professor Tanja Lange from the Department of Mathematics and Computer Science is the coordinator on behalf of TU/e and pulls the cart in cooperation with Lejla Batina (UK), Herbert Bos (VU), Marten van Dijk (CWI) and Christian Schaffner. (UVA). The other TU/e students in the CiCS project are Sandro Etalle, Kathrin Hövelmanns, Andreas Hülsing, Alberto Ravagnani, Sven Schäge, Monika Trimoska and Boris Skoric.
Moon Shot Problem
“Cybersecurity is in the news every week with knowledge breaches and critical vulnerabilities,” says Lange. “We took a step backwards in the reconstruction plan, rather than contributing to the cycle of disruption and correction that dominates the existing approach. The result: the “Cybersecurity Challenges” project. This is a primary problem, but we have a strong team of suitable scientists and we have a roadmap with nine main challenges. “
The Dutch company is investing in seven primary school projects at Dutch universities. This was announced today through Minister Dijkgraaf. It includes studies on mechanical stresses in plants; a greater understanding of our body’s proteins; cybersecurity; treatment for blindness; the chemical basis of intellectual disorders; Reaction to the crisis and chemical garage of electricity. The seven projects in those spaces are among the most scientifically successful in the world, or are about to be.
Gravitational Program
The grants are part of the Gravitation program, through which the company has been investing in science for a decade. Every two years, teams of scientists working at Dutch universities can benefit from an investment. Research projects now get part of the effective Gravitation program and, in the case of a successful evaluation after five years, the instant component. This allows them to conduct ten years of research. This long-term investment acts as a magnet for the most sensible clinical talent.
Dijkgraaf: “With investments like this, we ensure that the Netherlands remains among the world’s clinical leaders. Not only does this provide new knowledge, but it also strengthens our economy. And it brings inventions from which we all derive advantages. I am proud that we have so much clinical skill in our own country. It’s not something that can be taken for granted. It really is something to be appreciated.
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SOURCE: TU/e
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