NEW YORK, Feb. 27, 2019 /PRNewswire/ -- Four students from Carnegie Mellon University won the 2019 Deloitte Foundation Cyber Threat Competition. Team members Karttik Panda, Veera Nandiraju, Sanika Suwant and Nishith Yadav each received $2,000 in scholarship money. Carnegie Mellon University teams have competed since the competition began five years ago, and always rank amongst top performing teams. This is the first win for the university.
The competition consisted of three rounds over the last two month that culminated Saturday, Feb. 23, 2019. The first round was an online cyber competency quiz and the second was an online technical challenge. In both, students competed individually. Then, the top qualifying student competitors from each university were invited to Deloitte's leadership center, Deloitte University in Westlake, Texas, to represent their schools as teams and compete in the final round — the Cyber Wargame event. In this competition, the teams faced off during a two-day challenge that simulated a real corporate environment during a cyber-attack. Teams had to evaluate the information available and return a response plan recommendation to a fictitious team of corporate executives, made up of Deloitte cyber professionals.
"In the first rounds, we test their technical cyber chops, but the final round is quite different from most cyber hackathon competitions, as we also test their business acumen," said Anthony Russo, a cyber risk services principal in Risk and Financial Advisory at Deloitte & Touche LLP. "Real-world cyber incidents test even the most capable business leaders and impact an entire organization not merely their information technology environments. It's important for students to experience how corporations today may be responding to such events, and to test the critical thinking, communication and problem-solving skills they will need as they head into the workforce."
The first-place team received $2,000 in scholarship money per student, the second-place team received $1,000 per student and the third-place team received $500 in scholarship per student. Students from Purdue University placed second overall, and the university was a new entrant to the competition this year. Four undergraduate students from Terry College of Business at The University of Georgia finished third.
"The Deloitte Foundation recognizes cybersecurity as one of the most complex challenges that students can face as they enter the working world, and as one of the largest talent voids organizations are struggling to address," said John Rooney, principal, Deloitte Transaction & Business Analytics LLP and Deloitte Foundation board member. "Our mission is to accelerate education innovation and we're excited to see the interest in and growth of the Cyber Threat Competition over the past five years. The Foundation is committed to finding creative and impactful ways to prepare students for the future."
Barathi Krishnamurthy, a student in the masters program in information systems represented the University of Washington during the competition, and had this to say about the importance of such experiences, "In business school, we learn cyber concepts but it's a base upon which to build. The competition gives us the flavor of work that real cyber professionals do. This simulation experience put me directly in their shoes when a cyber incident occurs. I was able to connect a lot of dots from the classroom with what I learned in the competition and confirmed this is the industry where I want to be involved."
Students preparing to enter the workforce are facing an evolving cyber landscape and therefore should prepare themselves differently to meet these growing needs of organizations. Universities must now equip their students with the tools to meet those needs and become successful in this new landscape. To help accomplish this, this year's competition also featured a separate session for educators from the attending schools in Deloitte's Greenhouse™ Lab. In the Cyber Faculty Greenhouse™ Lab, educators participated in a full-day of dynamic engagement and collaborative brainstorming exercises. The lab was designed to equip educators with the tools they need to prepare the talent of tomorrow to face the changing the nature of cyber work, including the adaption of IoT, robotics and increased globalization.
"These competitions and experiences are invaluable for our students to understand the scope of cyber outside of solving puzzles and technical challenges," said Jeff Jenkins, a professor in the masters in cybersecurity program at Brigham Young University. "However, the Cyber Faculty Greenhouse Lab led by Deloitte was an outstanding opportunity to collaborate, discuss and plan for the cyber education opportunities and challenges of the future."
This competition, designed by Deloitte Cyber Risk Services, and supported by the Deloitte Foundation, exposes some of America's top students to the business and technology dimensions of cyber risk and inspires the next generation of talent interested in the type of challenges that companies from all industries encounter every day. With more than 3,500 cyber professionals in the U.S. alone, Deloitte's cyber practice helps complex organizations embrace cyber everywhere as part their strategic business objectives and more confidently leverage advanced technologies to achieve their strategic growth, innovation and performance goals.
About Deloitte Foundation
The Deloitte Foundation, founded in 1928, is a not-for-profit organization that supports education in the US through a variety of initiatives that help develop the talent of the future and their influencers and promote excellence in teaching, research and curriculum innovation. The Foundation sponsors an array of national programs relevant to a variety of professional services, benefiting middle/high school students, undergraduates, graduate students and educators. Learn more about the Deloitte Foundation.
About Deloitte
Deloitte provides industry-leading audit, consulting, tax and advisory services to many of the world's most admired brands, including nearly 90 percent of the Fortune 500 and more than 5,000 private and middle market companies. Our people work across the industry sectors that drive and shape today's marketplace to make an impact that matters — delivering measurable and lasting results that help reinforce public trust in our capital markets, inspire clients to see challenges as opportunities to transform and thrive, and help lead the way toward a stronger economy and a healthy society. Deloitte is proud to be part of the largest global professional services network serving our clients in the markets that are most important to them.
Deloitte refers to one or more of Deloitte Touche Tohmatsu Limited, a UK private company limited by guarantee ("DTTL"), its network of member firms, and their related entities. DTTL and each of its member firms are legally separate and independent entities. DTTL (also referred to as "Deloitte Global") does not provide services to clients. In the United States, Deloitte refers to one or more of the US member firms of DTTL, their related entities that operate using the "Deloitte" name in the United States and their respective affiliates. Certain services may not be available to attest clients under the rules and regulations of public accounting. Please see www.deloitte.com/about to learn more about our global network of member firms.
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