Skip to main content
Home

Main navigation

  • Home
  • Series
  • People
  • Depts & Colleges
  • Open Education

Main navigation

  • Home
  • Series
  • People
  • Depts & Colleges
  • Open Education

cyber security

Proving the Negative (PTNPod): Swanning About in Cyber Security
Captioned

That's a Wrap!

Resilience, cool communicators and space robots. This episode wraps a brilliant season of PTNPod, with Ari and Claudine's favourite 5 moments.
Proving the Negative (PTNPod): Swanning About in Cyber Security
Captioned

Value & Benefits

SPECIAL CONFERENCE EPISODE getting the inside scoop on UK Cyber Strategy.
Proving the Negative (PTNPod): Swanning About in Cyber Security
Captioned

Relevant & Useful

We discuss communication challenges and pipeline problems in cyber security.
Proving the Negative (PTNPod): Swanning About in Cyber Security
Captioned

Raising the Bar

Surprising social media harms and the Online Safety Bill. This week we're talking about Claudine's research into long term harms of social media content and managing the 'mundane'.
Proving the Negative (PTNPod): Swanning About in Cyber Security
Captioned

Power to the Ppl

Data protection and making consent more of a conversation. Listen up, and prosper!
Proving the Negative (PTNPod): Swanning About in Cyber Security
Captioned

Voice Hackers R Us

We’re learning about speech interfaces and hacking home assistants with nonsense and wordplay.
Proving the Negative (PTNPod): Swanning About in Cyber Security
Captioned

We are what we do

Instead of passwords, what if computers used our high fives to log us in?
Proving the Negative (PTNPod): Swanning About in Cyber Security
Captioned

Make or Break

Join us as we explore how to describe trust, reputation and messiness using maths!
Proving the Negative (PTNPod): Swanning About in Cyber Security
Captioned

Rethinking Risk

Sometimes threats come from inside the system (content warning: intimate partner violence).
Proving the Negative (PTNPod): Swanning About in Cyber Security
Captioned

The Kids aren’t OK

Designing and building apps to protect children and young folk from data harms.
Proving the Negative (PTNPod): Swanning About in Cyber Security

Technospheres

Political influence and the trading power of surveillance and censorship technologies.
Proving the Negative (PTNPod): Swanning About in Cyber Security

Networks of Hate

Exploring how hate groups use, lose and abuse social media networks.
Proving the Negative (PTNPod): Swanning About in Cyber Security

Intro

Welcome to Proving the Negative, a podcast exploring the wide wonderful world of cyber security research.
Department of Engineering Science Lectures

Will future communications technologies lead to cyber wars or a better world?

Communications technology has enabled massive social change over the past decades. However, the many benefits that we enjoy are accompanied by challenges - cyber security, inadequate coverage, the ease of spreading fake news,
Christmas Science Lectures

Social Media: The use of your online information for the Good, the Bad and the Ugly!

Social media, everyone uses it, whether it is to connect with long lost friends on Facebook, or to share selfies on Instagram or Twitter! In this talk, I consider the positives & negatives, security & privacy and how it can be used supportively.
Foundation for Law, Justice and Society

Social Media: Foundations of the Cyber-Society and the Role of Law

Damian Tambini, Senior Lecturer, Department of Media and Communications, LSE, gives a talk for the Foundation for Freedom, Law, Justice and Society.
Oxford London Lecture

Keeping our secrets? Shaping internet technologies for the public good

The Internet and related technologies, like smartphones and social networking services, are now a pervasive part of British life. Connected cars, smart cities, and ambient loos are coming soon.

Footer

  • About
  • Accessibility
  • Contribute
  • Copyright
  • Contact
  • Privacy
'Oxford Podcasts' Twitter Account @oxfordpodcasts | MediaPub Publishing Portal for Oxford Podcast Contributors | Upcoming Talks in Oxford | © 2011-2022 The University of Oxford