Purdue Students Interning in New State Security Ops Center
        
        
        
			- By Dian Schaffhauser
 - 10/14/15
 
		
        Purdue University students will have the chance to staff a new security and counter-terrorism  center intended to protect people and assets in the state of Indiana. A joint  initiative involving government, academia and the private sector will shortly  open the Indiana Security Operations  Center (SOC) near the Purdue campus. SOC will be part of the Indiana Information Sharing and  Analysis Center, the primary hub for information sharing and analysis on  cybersecurity issues, including network monitoring, vulnerability  identification and threat warnings of state computer systems.
SOC will be staffed by state employees and Purdue students,  all of whom will monitor security incidents on Indiana's computer network. The  students are part of Purdue's Pathmaker  Internship Program, which gives them entry-level engineering and computer  science job experience while still enrolled as full-time students. The jobs are  either on campus, in the Purdue Research Park (which is next door to the  university) or in company offices in West Lafayette. For these latest positions,  the interns will have restricted access to information and resources, and students  will be subject to "rigorous" security background checks.
At SOC, according to officials, the interns will help  resolve lower-level issues under the supervision of managers, thereby freeing  up the security specialists at the Indiana  Office of Technology to focus on higher-priority and more sensitive issues.  Initially, the center will have nearly a dozen employees and will operate only  from 8 to 5. In the future, those hours are expected to expand to become a 24/7  operation.
"We have seen repeatedly over the last several years  that data and network security are vitally important," said Lieutenant  Governor Sue Ellspermann, who chairs the state's Counterterrorism and Security Council,  in a prepared statement. "While it's difficult to anticipate every  potential threat to our networks, we must take every possible measure to be  ready when attacks occur. This facility will significantly improve Indiana's  ability to defend Hoosiers' information."
Noting that the new jobs will give students experience  "that will help them in their careers for years to come while working  part-time," added Purdue CIO Officer Gerry McCartney, "Purdue is a  recognized leader in cyber security and forensics, and this is a first step in  using our expertise to serve the citizens of Indiana in new ways."
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
            
        
        
                
                    About the Author
                    
                
                    
                    Dian Schaffhauser is a former senior contributing editor for 1105 Media's education publications THE Journal, Campus Technology and Spaces4Learning.