Board of Trustees
2004 Board Election
Candidates
Organization member candidate: Stephen Squires
Personal Statement
The Internet has become
a global phenomenon but the Internet Society is not
the first organization that most people think of as a critical Internet
resource. The society has not yet made the transition from an organization
that serves mainly the technical community and early adopters to an
organization that is capable of scaling to serve all the people who use
the
Internet or aspire to use it and those beyond the digital divide who may
not
even be aware of it. The Internet Society needs to transform into an
organization for all the People of Cyber Space and provide effective ways
to
engage progressively wider diversities of people in the process of
continuing advance of the frontier while reducing the digital divide.
Achieving the goal
of having the Internet Society recognized everywhere is
to have an educational mission focused on reducing barriers to learn about
and access the Internet. Organizations throughout the global Internet
community need to reach out to their local communities and leverage the
resources to educate and enable access for future generations. Reducing
the
digital divide should be viewed as an Internet Society Community Service
critical to bringing the power of IT to all the People.
Cyber Security has
become an international issue. The Internet has grown faster then the
ability to effectively resolve the security issues as evidenced by the
geometric growth of the "CERT Curves" (the continued increase
in vulnerabilities and incidents). This is a threat to the continued development
and growth of the Internet itself. Cyber Security needs to be given a
high priority by Internet Society in all aspects of its mission.
Biography: Stephen
L Squires, PhD
Hewlett-Packard Company
Vice President
Chief Science Officer
Stephen L. Squires
is vice president and chief science officer for Hewlett-Packard Company.
He is responsible for providing leadership in establishing overall strategic
scientific and technical directions, including the architecture of the
digital renaissance for the 21st century Internet.
Prior to joining HP
in November 2000, Squires was the special assistant for Information Technology
to the director of the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA).
During his career at DARPA, he was responsible for advancing the frontier
of progressively larger sectors of information technology. He developed
plans for, managed, and directed the scalable systems parts of the DARPA
Strategic Computing Program, the Federal High Performance Computing and
Communications Program and its extension to the National Information Infrastructure.
These programs are recognized as having helped enable the modern Internet,
including its scalable parallel and distributed high-performance computing
systems and the introduction of an explicit service layer. He joined DARPA
in 1983 as a program manager.
Squires was recruited
by the National Security Agency (NSA) as a freshman undergraduate electrical
engineering student at Drexel University. He worked as an engineering
intern in the advanced computing and communications laboratories of the
NSA. Throughout his career as an electrical engineer and computer scientist
at NSA, he focused on the most challenging national security problems
using advanced information technologies. In addition, he had early access
at NSA to the full range of advanced technologies as they emerged, including
many in cooperation with DARPA, such as early interactive time sharing
systems with graphics, UNIX, ARPAnet, extensible programming systems,
local area networks, the early Internet, personal computing, VLSI design,
rapid prototyping and the highest performance information system technologies.
Squires earned his
Ph.D. from Harvard University. He grew up in suburban Philadelphia where
he spent most of his time discovering how things worked and inventing
in his parents' garage and his own basement laboratory complete with a
vacuum tube voltmeter, signal generators, an oscilloscope and a collection
of transistors. He also had access to the laboratories of the Franklin
Institute Science Museum, universities and industry as vice president
of his high school's Future Scientists of America program.
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