The Global Internet Strategy project’s National Advisory Board, chaired by Mike Daniels, is comprised of a distinguished group of leading academics, business leaders, and former public officials with experience in the wide array of constituencies affected by public policies on technology and the Internet. The role of Board members is to provide high level guidance and act as substantive advisors to the scholars working on the project and its final report.
NATIONAL ADVISORY BOARD MEMBERS
Note: We participate in this project in our individual capacities. The views expressed in the project’s reports and activities are those of the authors’ and do not necessarily represent our individual views, the views of the institutions with which we are affiliated, nor the views of the American Enterprise Institute or any of its affiliates.
Mike Daniels (chairman)
Mike Daniels is a visiting fellow in the Center for Internet, Communications, and Technology Policy at AEI, where he focuses on policies affecting the information technology sector with a particular focus on Internet governance and cybersecurity. He has served in senior advisory positions at the White House and the National Security Council and held positions with the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency and US National Commission for UNESCO. He currently serves as chairman of the Logistics Management Institute and Invincea Inc. He writes on a wide range of issues, including Internet security, privacy, and technology policy, and is coauthor of “Names, Numbers and Network Solutions: The Monetization of the Internet” (CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, 2013). Mr. Daniels has also served as chairman or on the board of directors for more than 20 prominent technology organizations and councils.
Rebecca Arbogast
Rebecca Arbogast serves as senior vice president for global public policy for Comcast NBCUniversal, responsible for the development and coordination of the company’s public policy. Previously, she was managing director at Stifel Financial and chief of the international bureau’s telecommunications division at the Federal Communications Commission. Ms. Arbogast served in the office of legal counsel of the US Department of Justice and began her legal career as a corporate attorney with WilmerHale practicing international and communications law. She graduated from Yale Law School and holds a master’s degree from the University of Iowa. She has taught constitutional law at Johns Hopkins School of Public Policy and global communications at American University. She clerked for Judge William A. Fletcher on the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals and was a Fulbright Fellow in European community law.
Teresa Carlson
Teresa Carlson is currently the head of Amazon Web Services worldwide public sector, responsible for strategy, operations, sales, and business development for Amazon’s cloud-computing business for governments, educational institutions, and nonprofits globally. She also serves as the lead public policy adviser for worldwide government engagement. Ms. Carlson has earned industry recognition for her leadership, including Washington Life’s 2015 Power 100 list, the 2014 Northern Virginia Technology Council “Tech Exec of the Year,” the 2014 FedScoop50 Award for Industry Leadership, and Business Insider’s 2014 Most Important People in Cloud Computing. Other awards include the 2013 FCW Fed100 Eagle Award and Fast Company’s 2010 list of the “Most Influential Women in Technology.” She has a bachelor’s degree and master of science degree in communications and speech and language pathology from Western Kentucky University. She serves as the board chairman of the American Red Cross in the national capital region; on the American Red Cross Tiffany Circle National Philanthropic Committee; as a board member of the Economic Club of Washington, DC; on the Northern Virginia Tech Council Board; on the Wolf Trap Foundation board of directors; and on the USO of Metropolitan Washington board of directors. She was also appointed to a five-year term as a member of the board of visitors for Virginia Commonwealth University in 2012.
Scott Carpenter
Scott Carpenter is the director of free expression at Google Ideas and the team’s deputy. He drives implementation of the team’s overall strategy to make online repressive censorship irrelevant. Before joining Google, he founded and directed Project Fikra as the Keston Family Fellow at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy, where he remains an adjunct fellow. Previously, he served as deputy assistant secretary of state in the Bureau of Near East Affairs, where he helped conceive and implement the Middle East Partnership Initiative before being named coordinator for the Broader Middle East and North Africa Initiative. His other roles in government include director of governance for the Coalition Provisional Authority in Iraq from April 2003 to July 2004 and deputy assistant secretary in the Bureau of Human Rights and Democracy. Earlier in his career, Mr. Carpenter worked for the International Republican Institute where he founded and codirected its European program from Bratislava, Slovakia, and on Capitol Hill. He received his master of arts from the Johns Hopkins University School of Advanced International Studies and is a member of the Council on Foreign Relations.
John Chen
John Chen is executive chairman of BlackBerry’s board of directors and CEO. Before joining BlackBerry, he served as chairman and CEO of Sybase Inc. He previously held a series of executive positions at Siemens AG, Pyramid Technology Corporation, and Burroughs Corporation. He has testified before Congress on US-China trade relations. In 2005, President George W. Bush appointed him to serve on the President’s Export Council, and in 2006, he was appointed cochair of the Secure Borders and Open Doors Advisory Committee. Additionally, he chaired the US-China Policy Advisory Roundtable for the Center for Strategic and International Studies. In recognition of his leadership in building US-Asia relations, Mr. Chen has received awards from the US-Asia Institute, the US China Policy Foundation, and the California-Asia Business Council. For his corporate board work, he has been honored by the US Pan Asian American Chamber of Commerce Education Foundation. He graduated from Brown University magna cum laude with a bachelor’s degree in electrical engineering and holds a master’s degree in electrical engineering from California Institute of Technology. Mr. Chen has an honorary professorship from Shanghai University and honorary doctorates from San Jose State University, City University of Hong Kong, and Hong Kong University of Science and Technology. He serves on the board of directors for the Walt Disney Company and Wells Fargo & Company. He is also a trustee of California Institute of Technology, a board member of the National Committee on US-China Relations, a member of the Council on Foreign Relations, a national trustee of The First Tee, and governor of the San Francisco Symphony.
Karen Evans
Karen Evans is the national director for the US Cyber Challenge, a nationwide talent-search and skills-development program focused specifically on the cyber workforce. She is retired after nearly 28 years of federal government service, most recently as administrator for e-government and information technology at the Office of Management and Budget within the executive office of the president. She oversaw the federal IT budget of nearly $71 billion, which included implementation of IT throughout the federal government. She also had responsibilities with capital planning and investment control; information security; privacy and accessibility of IT for persons with disabilities; and access to, dissemination of, and preservation of government information. Before becoming the administrator, she was the chief information officer for the Department of Energy and was director of the information resources management division at the US Department of Justice’s Office of Justice Programs. Ms. Evans serves as an independent director and outside manager for publicly traded companies and is also an independent consultant in the areas of leadership, management, and the strategic use of information technology. She currently serves as a director on the boards of the NIC Inc., Center for Internet Security, and the Department of Veterans Affairs Acquisition Academy. She is the outside manager for Accenture Federal Services and a advisory board member for several information technology companies. She holds a bachelor’s degree in chemistry and a master of business administration degree from West Virginia University.
Anup Ghosh
Anup Ghosh is the founder and CEO at Invincea. Before founding Invincea, he was a program manager at the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, where he created and managed an extensive portfolio of cyber security programs. He has previously held roles as chief scientist in the Center for Secure Information Systems at George Mason University and as vice president of research at Cigital Inc. Dr. Ghosh has published more than 40 peer-reviewed articles in cyber security journals. He is a frequent on-air contributor to CNN, CNBC, NPR, and Bloomberg TV. A number of major media outlets carry his commentaries on cyber security issues, including The Wall Street Journal, The New York Times, Forbes, Associated Press, Fox News, and USA Today. He has served on the Naval Studies Board and the Air Force Scientific Advisory Board, informing the future of American cyber defenses.
Jack Goldsmith
Jack Goldsmith is the Henry L. Shattuck Professor of Law at Harvard Law School, a senior fellow at the Hoover Institution at Stanford University, and cofounder of the Lawfare Blog. He teaches and writes about national security law, presidential power, cybersecurity, international law, internet law, foreign relations law, and conflict of laws. Before coming to Harvard, he served as assistant attorney general in the Office of Legal Counsel from 2003 to 2004 and as special counsel to the Department of Defense from 2002 to 2003.
David Gross
David Gross is a partner at Wiley Rein LLP and one of the world’s foremost experts on international telecommunications, having addressed the United Nations General Assembly and led more US delegations to major international telecommunication conferences than anyone else in modern history. Drawing on his more than 30 years of experience as a lawyer, global policymaker, and corporate executive, Mr. Gross assists US companies seeking to enter or expand international businesses. He also advises national governments and non-US companies organizations seeking to invest in, monitor, and understand the US and international markets. Mr. Gross advises companies and others on international and domestic telecoms, Internet, and high-tech strategy focusing on specific markets and international organizations.
Michael Hayden
Michael Hayden is a principal at the Chertoff Group, where he briefs clients on intelligence matters worldwide, including developments in cybersecurity. As director of the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), he was responsible for overseeing the collection of information concerning the plans, intentions, and capabilities of America’s adversaries; producing timely analysis for decision makers; and conducting covert operations to thwart terrorists and other enemies of the US. Before becoming director of the CIA, General Hayden served as the country’s first principal deputy director of national intelligence and was the highest-ranking intelligence officer in the armed forces. Earlier, he served as commander of the Air Intelligence Agency, director of the Joint Command and Control Warfare Center, director of the National Security Agency, and chief of the Central Security Service. He graduated from Duquesne University with a bachelor’s degree in history in 1967 and a master’s degree in modern American history in 1969. He also did postgraduate work at the Defense Intelligence School conducted by the Defense Intelligence Agency. He is currently a distinguished visiting professor at George Mason University.
Tom Kuhn
Tom Kuhn is president of the Edison Electric Institute (EEI), an association of investor-owned electric companies whose members generate and distribute approximately three-quarters of the nation’s electricity. He joined EEI in 1985 as executive vice president, was named chief operating officer in 1988, and was elected president in 1990. Before joining the institute, Mr. Kuhn was president of the American Nuclear Energy Council. He also previously headed the energy section of the investment banking firm Alex. Brown & Sons and was the White House liaison officer to the secretary of the navy. He received a bachelor of arts degree in economics in 1968 from Yale University, served as a naval officer following his graduation, and completed a master’s in business administration in 1972 from George Washington University. He completed the Stanford University Graduate School of Business Senior Executive program in 1989. Mr. Kuhn served on the Secretary of Energy advisory board and the board of the US Chamber of Commerce. He currently serves on the boards of the United States Energy Association, the Electric Drive Transportation Association, and the American Council for Capital Formation. He is chairman-emeritus of the US Chamber of Commerce Committee of 100, chairman-emeritus of the American Society of Association Executives, and past chairman of the American Society of Association Executives’ Key Industry Association Committee and of the Trade Association Liaison Council.
Dominique Lazanski
Dominique Lazanski is a London-based digital policy and strategy consultant and works on cyber security policy and Internet governance for the GSM Association. She began her career with positions at Yahoo, eBay, and Apple, where she helped launch the first iTunes stores in the US. In 2005 she moved to London to complete a master’s degree in information systems management at the London School of Economics. She has worked as a freelance digital strategist ever since, three years of which were spent at the TaxPayers’ Alliance working on digital policy. She has a long-held interest in Internet governance and has written and spoken on digital issues. She holds a bachelor of arts from Cornell University and a second master’s degree from the University of Bath and is working on her Ph.D. She was a member of the UK’s Open Data User Group in the Cabinet Office from 2012 to 2014 and the tax transparency board in Her Majesty’s Revenue and Customs. She participates on the Multistakeholder Advisory Group on Internet Governance in the UK. She worked on the first Cyberspace Conference with the UK’s Foreign Office and the ICC in London to secure business participation in the conference. Since joining the GSM Association in September 2013, Ms. Lazanski has led the members’ Internet Governance Task Force, which includes planning and preparations for key Internet governance meetings. She was on the executive multistakeholder committee for NetMundial in April 2014 and is currently a member of the multistakeholder advisory group of the Internet Governance Forum.
Jack London
Jack London is executive chairman and chairman of the board of CACI International. In this position, he oversees strategic initiatives to ensure shareholder value, advance client missions, cultivate key client relationships, and monitor major financial transactions, including CACI’s legacy mergers and acquisitions program that Dr. London began in 1992. After serving as CACI’s president and CEO for 23 years, he stepped out of the CEO role to become executive chairman on July 1, 2007. He first joined CACI as a program manager and has held roles as vice president, division president, president, and CEO. As a “hands-on” CEO, he was the architect of CACI’s operational turnaround in 1984–85 for both revenue and profit growth. Dr. London is a graduate of the US Naval Academy and the Naval Postgraduate School, where he earned, respectively, a bachelor of science in naval engineering and a master of science in operations research. He holds a doctorate in business administration with distinction from George Washington University.
Kevin Martin
Kevin Martin is the vice president for mobile and global access policy at Facebook, where he oversees, among others, Facebook’s free-access program Internet.org. Previously, he served as chairman (2005–09) and commissioner (2001–05) of the Federal Communications Commission (FCC). During his tenure, the FCC adopted a nonbinding policy statement on net neutrality, which led to the 2010 Open Internet Order. After leaving the FCC he joined the Aspen Institute as a senior fellow at the think tank’s Communications and Society Program and later joined the law firm Squire Patton Boggs LLP as a partner. He holds a bachelor of arts from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, a master’s of public policy from Duke University, and a J.D. from Harvard Law School.
Matthew McCabe
Matthew McCabe is a senior vice president and senior advisory specialist for the network security and data privacy group with the FINPRO practice at Marsh’s New York City headquarters. His current responsibilities include advising clients on emerging cybersecurity trends and issues and ways in which they can address their unique data and privacy needs. Before joining Marsh, Mr. McCabe served as senior counsel to the US House of Representatives Committee on Homeland Security, where he advised congressional representatives on federal, state, and local policy involving cybersecurity, data protection, and privacy law. He also previously served as in the administration of President George W. Bush as a policy director on the Homeland Security Council. Before working in Washington, Mr. McCabe was a litigator at Schulte Roth & Zabel in New York, specializing in securities and accounting fraud and antitrust cases. In April 2015, he was named a senior fellow for the George Washington University Center for Cyber and Homeland Security. He holds a bachelor of arts from Bucknell University and a J.D. from Hofstra University School of Law.
Bryan Palma
Bryan Palma is senior vice president and general manager of Cisco Advanced Services Group. He is responsible for leading the development and execution of Cisco’s professional, managed, and subscription services portfolio across a global team of more than 6,500 employees. His organization helps customers design, build, and operate technology capabilities across network, data center, cloud, collaboration, video, mobility, and security. Before joining Cisco, Mr. Palma was vice president of cyber and security solutions at Boeing, where he was responsible for critical infrastructure protection, network surveillance, data analytics, and cyber simulation solutions for federal, commercial, and international customers. Before his work at Boeing, he was vice president of service delivery operations for Hewlett Packard. He was also PepsiCo’s first chief information security officer, where he positioned the company as best-in-class for enterprise security and compliance within the consumer products industry. As a special agent with the United States Secret Service, he was assigned to the Washington, DC, field office, where he helped pioneer efforts to combat cybercrime. As cofounder of the agency’s electronic crimes taskforce, he influenced the development of electronic crime task forces throughout the world. Mr. Palma holds a bachelor’s degree in English and speech communications from the University of Richmond, a master’s degree in business administration from Duke University’s Fuqua School of Business, and a master’s degree of education in counseling and personnel services from the University of Maryland.
Jeremy A. Rabkin
Jeremy A. Rabkin is an adjunct scholar in the Center for Internet, Communications, and Technology Policy and a member of AEI’s Council of Academic Advisers. At AEI, he focuses on cybersecurity and Internet governance issues. He is also a professor of law at George Mason University School of Law, where he teaches international law and administrative law. He previously taught for more than two decades in the department of government at Cornell University. Dr. Rabkin’s books include “Law without Nations? Why Constitutional Government Requires Sovereign States” (Princeton University Press, 2005) and “The Case for Sovereignty: Why the World Should Welcome American Independence” (AEI Press, 2004). He serves on the board of directors of the US Institute of Peace and on the board of the Center for Individual Rights, a public law firm in Washington, DC.
Gary Shapiro
Gary Shapiro is president and CEO of the Consumer Electronics Association, the US trade association representing more than 2,000 consumer technology companies, which owns and produces Consumer Electronics Show. He leads a staff of 150 employees and thousands of industry volunteers and has testified before Congress on technology and business issues more than 20 times. He led the industry through its successful transition to HDTV, cofounded and chaired the HDTV Model Station, and served as a leader of the Advanced Television Test Center. Mr. Shapiro authored the New York Times best-sellers, “Ninja Innovation: The Ten Killer Strategies of the World’s Most Successful Businesses” (Harper Collins, 2013) and “The Comeback: How Innovation will Restore the American Dream” (Beaufort, 2011). Through these books and television appearances and as a columnist whose more than 400 opinion pieces have appeared in publications such as The Wall Street Journal, The New York Times, and The Washington Post, Mr. Shapiro has helped direct policymakers and business leaders on the importance of innovation in the US economy. He has held many exhibition industry leadership posts and received the exhibition industry’s highest honor, the IAEE Pinnacle Award. He currently sits on the State Department’s Advisory Committee on International Communications and Information Policy. He has served on the board of directors of the Northern Virginia Technology Council and the Economic Club of Washington, as a member of the Commonwealth of Virginia’s Commission on Information Technology, and on the board of visitors of George Mason University.
Craig Silliman
Craig Silliman is executive vice president of public policy and general counsel, responsible for leading Verizon’s public policy, legal, regulatory, government affairs, and security groups. Before assuming his current position in January 2015, he was senior vice president for public policy and government affairs, with responsibility for Verizon’s global public policy, federal and state legislative affairs, federal regulatory affairs, strategic alliances, national security, privacy, and corporate citizenship. Before that, he served in several other senior management roles at Verizon. He was senior vice president and general counsel for Verizon’s wireline consumer, business, and wholesale groups globally and was senior vice president and deputy general counsel, with responsibility for antitrust, intellectual property, national security, privacy, and strategic product support. Before joining a Verizon predecessor company in 1997, Mr. Silliman was an attorney in the international trade practice at Collier, Shannon, Rill & Scott in Washington, DC. He has also taught international telecommunications regulation as an adjunct professor at the American University School of Law in Washington, DC.
Jody Westby
Jody Westby is CEO of Global Cyber Risk LLC. Drawing on a unique combination of more than 20 years of technical, legal, policy, and business experience, she provides consulting and legal services to public- and private-sector clients around the world in the areas of privacy, security, cybercrime, breach management, and IT governance. She also serves as adjunct professor for the Georgia Institute of Technology’s School of Computer Science and is adjunct distinguished fellow for Carnegie Mellon CyLab. She is a professional blogger for Forbes. She led the development of the International Toolkit on Cybercrime Legislation and is an editor and coauthor of “The Quest for Cyber Peace” (WFS-ITU, 2010). Ms. Westby is the coauthor and editor of four books on privacy, security, cybercrime, and enterprise security programs and the author of two books on legal issues associated with cybersecurity research, all published by the American Bar Association (ABA). Previously, she launched In-Q-Tel, was senior managing director at PricewaterhouseCoopers, was senior fellow and director of IT studies for the Progress & Freedom Foundation, and was director of domestic policy for the US Chamber of Commerce. Ms. Westby practiced law at Shearman & Sterling and Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison. She is a member of the American Bar Foundation and the Cosmos Club. She serves as cochair of the ABA’s Privacy and Computer Crime Committee (Science & Technology Law Section) and Cybercrime Committee (Criminal Justice Section) and served three terms on the ABA President’s Cybersecurity Task Force. She cochaired the World Federation of Scientists’ permanent monitoring panel on information security and served on the ITU secretary general’s high-level experts group on cybersecurity.
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