|
Register for our Free Newsletters |
|
 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Other Carouselweb publications |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
New advisor joins Splinternet board
|
Splinternet
: 15 September, 2008 (Company News) |
|
Threat detection sensor network management company recruits seasoned security expert onto its board of advisors |
|
Splinternet Holdings has announced that Joseph Rosetti, President of SafirRosetti, is a new member of Splinternet's Board of Advisors.
Prior to forming SafirRosetti, Mr Rosetti was Vice Chairman of Kroll Associates, responsible for corporate security and crisis management. From 1971 to 1987 he had worldwide responsibility for IBM security programs in physical security, investigations, personnel security, trade secret protection, information asset security, financial asset security and Department of Defence Security. As IBM Security Director, he also served as Vice Chairman of the Secretary of State's Overseas Security Advisory Council.
Prior to joining IBM, Mr Rosetti was the Northeast Director for the Law Enforcement Assistance Administration of the US Department of Justice and a Special Agent, Group Supervisor, and Special Assistant to the Assistant Commissioner for Compliance in the Intelligence Division, US Treasury Department.
Mr Rosetti holds a Bachelor of Science Degree in Accounting from Pennsylvania Military College (Widener University) and a Master's Degree in Accounting from Southeastern University. He is a National Institute of Public Affairs Fellow, University of Southern California. Mr Rosetti is the recipient of many awards including the Ellis Island Medal of Honour, and Tribute of Appreciation, United States Department of State.
"We're extremely pleased to welcome Joe Rosetti to our Advisory Board," said James Ackerly, CEO of Splinternet.
Splinternet's Defentect DM3 intelligent threat awareness architecture is a management, monitoring and messaging homeland security technology that communicates data from perimeter or portal radiological sensors to an incident command centre as well as to PDAs, cellphones or pagers. When high-energy gamma rays from Dirty Bomb substances interact with Defentect's Gammatect sensors, proprietary algorithms analyse the data and alert authorities to radiation that may pose a security threat.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|