What is IoT (Internet of Things)
Is Canada falling behind IoT
Security
Issues facing IoT
ISP Speed Canada
Business Climate / Canada
Groups / Partnerships
Market Update
3. Paul Young - Presenter
Bio
• CPA/CGA
• 25 years of experience in Academia, Industry and Financial solutions
• Youtube Channel -
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCAArky1bAXPSuV2NLtUnyLg
4. Agenda
• What is IoT (Internet of Things)
• Is Canada falling behind IoT
• Security
• Issues facing IoT
• ISP Speed Canada
• Business Climate / Canada
• Groups / Partnerships
• Market Update
5. What is IoT (Internet of Things)
• The Internet of Things (IoT) is a system of interrelated computing
devices, mechanical and digital machines, objects, animals or people
that are provided with unique identifiers and the ability to transfer
data over a network without requiring human-to-human or human-
to-computer interaction.
• A thing, in the Internet of Things, can be a person with a heart
monitor implant, a farm animal with a biochip transponder, an
automobile that has built-in sensors to alert the driver when tire
pressure is low -- or any other natural or man-made object that can
be assigned an IP address and provided with the ability to transfer
data over a network.
6. Security / IOT
• Now companies including ARM, Intercede, Solacia, and Symantec have developed the Open Trust Protocol (OTrP), designed to provide secure
architecture and code management to protect connected devices. The architecture uses technologies deployed in banking and for handling sensitive
data on smartphones and tablets.
• "In an internet-connected world, it is imperative to establish trust between all devices and service providers," said Marc Canel, vice president of
security systems, ARM. "Operators need to trust devices their systems interact with and OTrP achieves this in a simple way. It brings e-commerce
trust architectures together with a high-level protocol that can be easily integrated with any existing platform."
• OTrP is a high-level management protocol that works with security products, such as ARM's TrustZone-based Trusted Execution Environments, which
are designed to protect mobile computing devices from malicious attack. OTrP can be used with public key infrastructure-based systems to allow
service providers, app developers, and hardware maker to use their own keys to authenticate and manage trusted software and assets. The group
said OTrP can be easily added to existing Trusted Execution Environments or to microcontroller-based platforms capable of RSA cryptography.
• At its heart, OTrP is a management protocol designed to work with security software in order to protected Internet of Things and mobile devices from
malicious attacks. OTrP is available to download from Internet Engineering Task Force for those who want to test and prototype it in their security
environment.
• The group of companies hope that the protocol paves the way for an open standard to enable to management of trusted software without the need
for a centralised database - much like established method of security architecture in e-commerce.
• With new technologies come increased security risks," said Brian Witten, Senior Director, Internet of Things Security, Symantec. "The Internet of
Things and smart mobile technologies are moving into a range of diverse applications and it is important to create an open protocol to ease and
accelerate adoption of hardware-backed security that is designed to protect on board encryption-keys."
• The full group of companies who've worked together on OTrP consists of Intercede, Solacia, Symantec, Beanpod, Sequitur Labs, Sprint, Thundersoft,
Trustkernel, Verimatrix and ARM.
7. Globe and Mail Article
• Is-canada-falling-behind-in-iot-technology
8. What Drives IoT
• IP Addresses (Securing)
• Bandwidth
• Latency
• Network tools
• VPN
• Routers
• WAN/LAN (Internet Providers)
• Storage of Data
• Interpretation of data
• Structure/Unstructured Data
12. Market Update
• 56% of organizations have integrated IoT data into their existing core
business systems such as ERP, cloud hosting platforms, analytics tools,
and mobile applications.
• 55% of IoT adopters in the Americas have seen revenue growth by
greater than 20% following IoT implementation.
• Globally, IoT now accounts for 24% of the average IT budget –
equivalent to IT spending around cloud computing or data analytics.
• Forbes.com
In computing, bandwidth is the bit-rate of available or consumed information capacity expressed typically in metric multiples of bits per second. Variously, bandwidth may be characterized as network bandwidth,[1]data bandwidth,[2] or digital bandwidth.[3][4] This definition of bandwidth is in contrast to the field of signal processing, wireless communications, modem data transmission, digital communications, and electronics, in which bandwidth is used to refer to analogsignal bandwidth measured in hertz, meaning the frequency range between lowest and highest attainable frequency while meeting a well-defined impairment level in signal power.
Latency