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Showing posts with label conference. Show all posts
Showing posts with label conference. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 27, 2026

Reflections on Network-Centric Warfare at Geospatial World Forum 2026 Amsterdam, May 2026: When Data Becomes a Weapon : Panel -1

Earlier this year I received an invitation to participate in the Geospatial World Forum 2026 at the RAI Amsterdam  that is one of the more substantive gatherings in the Geospatial and Defence intelligence space. The week ran from April 27 through May 1, and I found myself sitting across from some of the sharpest practitioners working at the intersection of spatial intelligence, defence systems, and emerging technology. The conversations were candid, the perspectives diverse, and the stakes  given the current geopolitical climate  very real.

I was part of three panel discussions across the week. This is the first of a short series of posts where I'm putting down what we discussed  mostly for my own records, partly because these conversations deserve to exist somewhere beyond a conference hall.

Panel Discussion 5: Network-Centric Warfare and Data Centricity

The session title sounds clinical and crisp. What it actually described was one of the most consequential shifts in modern military doctrine  the move away from platform-centric thinking toward a model where the network itself is the force multiplier.

The core premise is straightforward: a sensor that sees something is only useful if that observation reaches a decision-maker before the window closes. In legacy architectures, that gap  between observation and action  has historically been where wars are lost. Network-centric warfare is the systematic attempt to collapse that gap.

Linking Sensors, Platforms, and Decision-Makers

What struck me most in our discussion was how mature the concept is, and how immature the execution still remains in many theatres. The vision is elegant: sensors  whether satellite, UAV, ground-based radar, or human intelligence feeds  pipe data into a unified digital ecosystem where platforms (vehicles, aircraft, naval assets) and decision-makers share a common operational picture in near-real-time.


The friction points are less glamorous. We talked about data standardisation across allied forces, legacy systems that weren't designed to interoperate, and the latency that creeps in at every translation layer. One of the panellists made a point I keep returning to: the weakest link in most network-centric architectures isn't the sensor  it's the middleware.


 
Rapid Data Sharing for Coordinated Response

The session highlight framing mentioned "coordinated and adaptive combat responses"  and this is where the discussion got genuinely interesting. Adaptive is the operative word. A static command-and-control model assumes that orders flow downward and the environment cooperates. Modern conflict doesn't offer that.

What network-centricity enables, at its best, is a force that can recompose itself in response to ground truth rather than responding to a plan that was made twelve hours ago. That requires not just fast data pipelines, but trust in those pipelines. Operators need to act on data they haven't personally verified. That's a significant psychological and institutional shift, and it came up more than once.

We also touched on the adversarial dimension  what happens when an opponent understands your data architecture well enough to inject noise, delay, or disinformation into it. The network that enables adaptive response can also be the attack surface. This bleeds directly into the cyber-geospatial panel I was part of later in the week, which I'll cover in the next post.

Situational Awareness, Force Agility, and Mission Effectiveness

These three phrases tend to travel together in defence literature, sometimes as buzzwords. In practice, they describe a genuine capability gradient.

Situational awareness at the tactical level means a soldier knows what's beyond the next ridgeline. At the operational level, it means a commander understands how a theatre is evolving across multiple simultaneous engagements. Network-centric architecture is what connects those two levels and everything between.

Force agility  the ability to reposition, reassign, or re-task elements quickly  is a direct function of how good that common picture is. If your forces are operating on shared, current data, you can exploit opportunities and respond to threats faster than an opponent who isn't.

Mission effectiveness is the output of the two above, but it also depends on something the technology can't fully provide: trained humans who can interpret ambiguous data and make decisions under pressure. We spent some time on this. The risk of over-automating the common operational picture is that you optimise for the scenario you modelled, not the one you're actually in.


WHAT I DISCUSSED 

On ZTA in networked battlefield architecture: One of the points I raised was why Zero Trust Architecture isn't optional in a network-centric environment  it's foundational. When you're linking sensors, platforms, and decision-makers across a distributed ecosystem, the old perimeter-defence model collapses entirely. Every node, every data feed, every inter-platform handshake has to be treated as potentially compromised. Assume breach, verify continuously, grant least-privilege access. In a coalition context especially, where you're operating with allied systems you don't fully control, ZTA is the only architecture that makes operational sense.

On zero-day exposure in sensor-platform pipelines:I brought up zero-day vulnerabilities specifically in the context of the network's attack surface. The more you integrate  sensors feeding platforms feeding command layers  the more entry points you create. A zero-day in a firmware layer of a battlefield edge device isn't just an IT problem; it's a potential blind spot or worse, a spoofed data feed entering your common operational picture. The network that gives you agility is the same network that, if unpatched and unmonitored, gives an adversary a quiet way in.

On homomorphic encryption for coalition data sharing: A practical problem in joint operations is that allied nations need to share processed intelligence without exposing raw sensor data to each other's systems. I discussed homomorphic encryption as a maturing solution here  the ability to run computation on encrypted data means a partner nation's AI layer can query your dataset without you ever decrypting it on their side. We're not at frictionless deployment yet, but the direction is clear.

On Differentially Private Federated Learning for shared battlefield AI: Federated learning lets distributed nodes  forward units, vehicles, command posts  contribute to a shared intelligence model without centralising raw operational data. Add differential privacy on top of that, and you're injecting calibrated noise into each node's contribution such that no individual data point can be reverse-engineered. I raised this as the architecture that makes collaborative battlefield AI viable without creating a single honeypot of sensitive operational data.


 
On sovereign AI models: This came up when we discussed why coalition forces can't simply share an AI layer the way they might share a radio frequency. Every nation feeding data into a shared model is implicitly exporting its operational patterns, its sensor signatures, its tactical doctrine. Sovereign AI  models trained and hosted within national infrastructure, on national data  isn't protectionism, it's operational security. Interoperability has to happen at the interface layer, not by pooling the model itself.

On distillation attacks against tactical AI: I flagged distillation attacks as an underappreciated threat vector in deployed military AI. If an adversary can interact with your tactical decision-support system enough times  even indirectly, through observing its outputs in the field  they can begin reconstructing its behaviour in a surrogate model. You've effectively handed them your doctrine without them ever touching your training data. Access control to AI system outputs matters as much as access control to the data that trained it.

On KASLR bypass at the edge: At the device level, KASLR bypass deserves attention in hardened military hardware. Kernel Address Space Layout Randomisation is a standard mitigation, but known bypass techniques mean it can't be the last line of defence on edge battlefield devices. I raised this in the context of the network's physical endpoints  the sensors and terminals that are closest to the threat environment and furthest from the patch cycle.

More from Amsterdam in the next post  on cyber-geospatial convergence and what it means to protect digital borders that exist in three-dimensional space.

Wednesday, July 28, 2021

National E-Conference on Regulation of Crypto-currency in India - 24 July 2021 at NLIU Bhopal

National E-Conference on Regulation of Crypto-currency in India was held on 24 July 2021. The themes covered in the conference are seen in the below pic:

I was part of the valedictory session of this conference, invited as a chief guest in the evening concluding session. More details of the same available at https://www.barandbench.com/apprentice-lawyer/first-national-e-conference-on-regulation-of-cryptocurrency-in-india-by-rgnclc-nliu-bhopal

Saturday, November 23, 2019

BLOCKCHAIN WORKSHOP AT G D GOENKA UNIVERSITY : REDSET-2019

The 5th International Conference on Recent Developments in Science, Engineering and Technology (REDSET 2019) organized at G D Goenka University, Sohna Road,Gurugram, focused on experimental, theoretical and application aspects of innovations in Data Science and Analytics. A one day workshop on BLOCKCHAIN TECHNOLOGY was organized by me as part of the conference.

Workshop course material at 


Few pictures from the event :







Friday, April 05, 2019

BLOCKCHAIN TECHNOLOGY & CRYPTOCURRENCY CRIMES & CHALLENGES



Today gave a talk on  "BLOCKCHAIN TECHNOLOGY & EMERGING CRYPTOCURRENCY CRIMES & CHALLENGES". The talk was part of first of its kind FDP held at RGPV University Bhopal.Few pics as seen below from the event

 



 
Covered in press as seen below :

INDIACOM-2019 : Paper Presented on "Coalition of IoT and Blockchain: Rewards and Challenges"

6th International Conference of INDIACom-2019, aimed at providing an effective platform to the researchers from all over the world to show-case their original research work, & have effective exchange of ideas and develop a strategic plan for balanced and inclusive growth of economy through IT in critical areas like E-Governance, E-Commerce, Disaster Management, GIS, Geo-spatial Technologies, Nano-Technology, Intellectual Property Rights, AI and Expert Systems, Networking, Software Engineering, High Performance Computing  and other Emerging Technologies. INDIACom-2019 was held held at Bharati Vidyapeeth, New Delhi (INDIA).I presented a paper on "Coalition of IoT and Blockchain: Rewards and Challenges"

Copy of the paper at  https://bvicam.ac.in/news/INDIACom%202019%20Proceedings/Main/papers/1042.pdf




Sunday, October 29, 2017

BITCOIN FORENSICS AGAIN : Bsides Delhi 2017

1. I have been on a spree like something giving presentations in the domain of BITCOIN FORENSICS for past few months...and more or less talking discussing around the same terms of references but to a new audience always though.Recently participated at Bsides Delhi. Security BSides is a community driven framework for building events by and for information security community members. These events are already happening in major cities all over the world!

The idea behind the Security BSides Delhi is to organise an Information Security gathering where professionals, experts, researchers, and InfoSec enthusiasts come together to discuss. It creates opportunities for individuals to both present and participate in an intimate atmosphere that encourages collaboration. It is an intense event with discussions, demos, and interaction from participants. It is where conversations for the next-big-thing are happening.

2.  Details on the event and about me at https://bsidesdelhi.in/anupam-tiwari/


Tuesday, September 26, 2017

BITCOIN is FOREN"SICK" : Threats and Solutions

1.  The increased use of cryptocurrencies such as Bitcoin among an increasing user base has opened a new avenue of research in the field of digital forensics involving cryptocurrencies. Since the creation of Bitcoin in 2008, cryptocurrencies have begun to make a presence in the world of e-commerce. Cryptography serves as the underlying foundation for Bitcoin, which gives it the benefits of confidentiality, integrity, non repudiation and authentication. Having been designed and built upon the foundation of these four objectives makes Bitcoin an attractive alternative to mainstream currency and provides users with the benefits of payment freedom, security, very low fees, and fewer risks for merchants.

2.  This presentation brings out the aspects and discusses on BITCOIN FORENSICS.The same was presented at National Information Security Summit (NISS) held at Lucknow,a premier International Information Security Awareness, Cyber Forensics, Malware Analysis, Cyber Cop, Cyber Law & Ethical Hacking Summit with skilled & proficient Speakers from government & private sector.


Few pics of the event below:



























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