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    okay so I just want to start off with
    asking if you could tell me your name
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    and your position sure so my name is
    Tasha and I'm the director of
    information technology for the College
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    of Engineering okay where did your
    involvement in OSU begin well
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    my involvement in OSU began as a
    undergrad student I'm originally from
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    Fairbanks Alaska and I came to Oregon
    State on what was at the time called
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    national student exchange which was a
    program that allowed me I was a I was
    enrolled at the University of Alaska
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    Fairbanks
    I came to Oregon State as an exchange
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    student and it was kind of a cool
    program where I came here but I paid my
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    home University in-state tuition even
    though I was basically an out-of-state
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    student here and so I did that for a
    year I really liked OSU I liked
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    Corvallis and I ended up I was supposed
    to go back to Alaska and finished off my
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    education in Alaska but I ended up
    transferring to Oregon State the next
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    year and then was a full time
    out-of-state student here in Corvallis
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    and I finished my degree at OSU I was
    hired by the University I worked here
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    for a couple years and I took a job with
    Apple back in Alaska I was their system
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    engineer for k-12 education in Alaska
    and I missed Corvallis and missed OSU a
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    lot Apple had me traveling four days a
    week and I really didn't like that and
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    OSU asked me if I'd come back I did and
    I've just ever since I've been
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    consistently kind of working at the
    liner yeah um just could you tell me a
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    little bit about your ideology
    surrounding data privacy in society sure
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    it's a it's a very interesting topic
    because I think we I think would make a
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    lot of assumptions that vendors who we
    give our data to we're going to do a
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    good job of keeping it secure and if you
    look at the number of breaches and
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    compromises by companies you know
    whether its target or or REI or Facebook
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    her name is on or whomever you know it
    seems like we see often enough things in
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    the news about breaches where people's
    identity their passwords their credit
    card numbers whatever have been
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    compromised you know personally I see
    that maybe you see it as well when we
    get the statements about are the the
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    things about our car credit card numbers
    have been compromised and they send us a
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    new credit card I mean that's because of
    a data breach data privacy breach
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    somewhere along the chain so so I think
    we make a lot of assumptions that our
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    data in in with companies of the work
    with is secure when in fact if you look
    at the number of breaches that's not
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    always the case basically yeah
    yeah and that's you know some of that's
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    anecdotal just on what we hear but when
    you hear these breaches involving
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    millions of people you know chances are
    we're gonna be part of that as well so
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    you know that said there are many
    different services in the cloud that do
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    a lot of things to enhance our education
    our research our ability to conduct
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    business and so we kind of have to rely
    on that these days as a service provider
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    on campus we take data security very
    very seriously we do an awful lot to
    protect the identity of our students
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    staff and faculty
    and you know it's it's it's a
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    double-edged sword because some of the
    things that we do make people's lives
    more difficult for example some of the
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    resources that you have to use a VPN to
    connect to there are what there are
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    things that we could do that would not
    require a VPN I mean I could make it so
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    you could map a network drive off campus
    without requiring a VPN we know there
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    are vulnerabilities in that process
    though
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    and so by requiring a VPN we add another
    layer of security to that that process
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    that we know is prone to be compromised
    there are things that we do with
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    two-factor authentication are you
    familiar with two-factor authentication
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    with duo yeah so you know this spring
    duo will be required for all staff and
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    faculty and some point in the future
    will be required for students that's a
    choice that we've made to try to help to
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    perfect protect the identity and the
    security of of our students and staff
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    and faculty on campus related to that
    and this is kind of like a duo things
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    just on a side note sure my girlfriend
    notes actually visiting her over the
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    weekend and she has duo because she's a
    employee of the at her school in Utah
    State and I actually see like a great
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    problem with it
    just in the you know the monotony of
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    logging into like canvas or something
    needed to do time and I could see that
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    barrier there being negative for
    students and definitely like hindering
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    their you know interaction with the site
    itself
    cuz I see her you know I have to go on
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    your phone logging just to log to the
    web site and so I kind of saw that as
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    you know personally ease-of-use is
    definitely amazing for me because I'm
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    able to kind of quickly access
    information and you know I'm more
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    inclined to access it when it's easier
    to do yeah so knowing my assignments and
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    interacting with like school resources
    is a lot easier for me because you know
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    there's a barrier it's not like I'm
    walking to a class
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    yeah adding a barrier to that kind of
    like increases the difficulty yeah
    totally hit it for you do oh and abled
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    on campus not right now okay so one
    thing you would find here on campus is
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    that we do not require it for campus
    mm-hmm and that was that's another one
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    of those kind of interesting use cases
    because some of the feedback we got from
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    faculty members had to do with not
    allowing students to take their phones
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    into class then if you have an
    assignment that requires getting on
    canvas or a quiz or an exam then that
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    becomes a problem if you are requiring
    people to use that device so at least on
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    our campus and it's different everywhere
    but we're first degree it's the security
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    issue yeah yeah so for students who are
    do have enabled canvas is not protected
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    mm-hmm
    that's a that's a trade-off yeah okay so
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    on a daily basis what does your work can
    consist of all sorts of things I do in
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    our College of Engineering we have
    roughly twelve thousand users we're
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    about a third at the University I manage
    a staff of 13 full-time professionals
    and around 60 student workers we're
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    responsible for the day-to-day IT
    computing needs for all those
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    individuals and so it takes an entire
    team effort to take care of that
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    so I'm responding to user requests I you
    know this morning for example I just
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    before you came in I was listening to a
    panel discussion of new hire on campus
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    we're interviewing for the chief
    information security officer for the
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    university so I was kind of paying
    attention to that I was talking to a
    faculty member who wants to buy into one
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    of our computing clusters they're part
    of college of engineering in Bend and
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    we're talking with them about buying
    some new nodes for our cluster so really
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    kind of helping faculty members think
    about what kind of computing needs they
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    need to take care of their research is a
    big part of a bigger part of what I do I
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    interact a lot with different vendors
    and different partners that we have this
    morning
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    and another vendor that was here at nine
    o'clock were down in the first floor
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    Kelly Engineering Center we're looking
    to a remodel of of one of our conference
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    rooms and so I had a vendor that was in
    we were talking about ideas and kind of
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    use cases and how people want to use the
    facility and then they're gonna come
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    back to us with a proposal on how we
    might do that so I I do an awful lot to
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    represent the college of engineering or
    students staff and faculty within with
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    different IT groups on campus with with
    partners with vendors with donors you
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    know I tend to be the external face for
    our group for our college when it comes
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    to IT matters how does in your eyes have
    this cloud technology evolved education
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    it's it's had a huge impact on the way
    that we're able to provide services to
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    students you know I'll give you a couple
    of examples of that and it's it's not
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    just education it's kind of more than
    that we used to be a blackboard school
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    before canvas and blackboard was hosted
    on campus with servers on campus and we
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    would see often that those services are
    being overloaded particularly at the
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    beginning of the quarter and then during
    dead in finals week when we moved to
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    canvas we moved to a cloud provider and
    what's great about canvas is that
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    they're able to scale the computing
    resources that they have based on our
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    needs so we don't have to provide
    servers on campus to provide the
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    functionality of canvas it's all cloud
    hosted they you know they they manage
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    that they're the professionals at it and
    I think that's kind of been that's been
    one of the biggest things is that we pay
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    cloud providers to do a really good job
    at what they do we're not able to do
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    that on campus and we shouldn't we
    should not kid ourselves and think that
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    we can so if you look at services like
    box like WebEx like Google
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    was like those are those are big
    companies they specialize in doing that
    we should not even begin to kid
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    ourselves to think that we can compete
    with them there are other areas where we
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    can and we do a better job of things
    that are hosted on campus but for those
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    services that like that's their job
    that's how they make their money if
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    they're offline that's really bad for
    there just aren't holders in their
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    business
    we should not kid ourselves to think
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    that we can do a better job than they
    can where we should really be very
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    careful those around the data security
    piece and making sure that they are
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    properly vetted that we understand their
    practices around data security that we
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    understand that they understand FERPA
    and some of the other other federal
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    regulations and you have to deal with
    because you know we're still vulnerable
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    but I the services that they provide in
    the cloud are far better than anything
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    we could do on campus and you know we
    hope that by exposing students to those
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    and faculty members and building them
    into curriculum that that you as a
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    student are able to do great things and
    that you're able to collaborate with
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    others and you're able to innovate that
    you're able to study for your exam to
    learn new topics through those cloud
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    providers their big party education yeah
    yeah that's awesome especially with
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    vetting services around I guess yeah
    when did oh s you start to build the
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    largely did digital infrastructure we've
    had bits and pieces of that for a long
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    time you know back in the back in the
    early 90s we did class registration
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    electronically a very different look
    very different than it does now but you
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    know I would say early 90s and moving
    forward progressively data networking on
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    campus has been a real big issue
    in bringing all of our buildings up to
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    appropriate specifications for data
    capacities and speeds and wireless and
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    you know the whole pushed towards
    wireless access points and mobile
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    devices that really spurred us to do a
    lot for providing good wireless service
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    in and you know now we have we were
    rated this past fall is the number one
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    fastest Wi-Fi in the country yeah for
    any public university or any public or
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    private university that's a pretty big
    deal and that is a that's the that's the
    result of a progression of us taking
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    this very seriously and adding more and
    more into our portfolio with with in so
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    you know when I think of digital that
    that's a pretty wide wide spectrum but
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    yeah if you look at any one piece of
    that it takes an entire team to build
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    that and so it's on top of itself yeah
    exactly so you know for example if you
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    look at just Wireless as a piece of that
    there's a wireless access point outside
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    my office the infrastructure and the
    different groups on campus that are
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    required to come together for that is
    pretty extreme because there's the
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    access point out there it runs through a
    network it plugs into a switch it then
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    runs through some fiber it plugs into a
    router it runs through some more fiber
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    it goes through our controller through a
    firewall and then it goes through some
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    more fiber and it goes out to a router
    which then connects us to the Internet
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    you know that's a that involves multiple
    groups on campus the people that that
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    build the fibre that specify where the X
    point access point needs to be that run
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    the routers that run the firewalls that
    run all the different configuration
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    things that's that's that's a number of
    different people from a number of
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    different groups and over time as as the
    kind of the digital sense of the
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    university has increased we've had to
    step up in each of those areas as well
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    and now we're at a point where we're
    it's pretty cool because we we have a
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    good we have really good people that the
    each of those areas that were able to
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    work together and then more on the you
    know the third party side with Amazon
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    however Amazon Web Services integrated
    with OSU sure yeah so about a year ago
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    we signed what's called an enterprise
    agreement with Amazon which means that
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    we're able to officially do business
    with them we have a contract in place
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    that allows us to do this that protects
    both groups right now most of our spend
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    on Amazon is on the research side of the
    house so research computing so you're a
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    faculty member or a grad student you
    have a need for computing resources and
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    you make the decision that you want to
    spend that up in Amazon instead of
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    buying hardware that we would post here
    on campus and so most of our spend right
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    now is on the research side of the house
    we do have a couple of things so there
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    are more infrastructures so for example
    there's a service that we run called
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    single sign-on and that's the kind of
    the familiar place where regardless if
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    you're going to sign into box or Google
    or one or WebEx there's or canvas
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    there's a login screen that comes up and
    you enter your onid credentials up until
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    I don't know six months or so ago all of
    that single sign-on piece was held on
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    campus and what that meant was if we
    ever had a really bad internet outage
    and the campus was disconnected then
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    even though you had services in the
    cloud like canvas and in Google and
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    inbox you would not be able to access
    them because you first had to come back
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    to campus for that single sign-on
    piece.we now hosts one of our single
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    sign-on servers in amazon and if my
    second backup yeah as a real-time backup
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    so if the university were to be
    disconnected from the internet whether
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    that was through a tape act of terrorism
    or an earthquake or a natural hazard
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    we'd still be able to access these
    services that are cloud hosted because
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    instead of having to come back to campus
    we're able to host that single sign-on
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    piece in the Amazon Cloud that's pretty
    cool it's a nice note of resiliency for
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    us and gives us some options without
    having the
    contract and pieces of parts in place we
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    would not have been able to do that okay
    so that's just one kind of practical
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    example for you of how Amazon was able
    to accomplish what we do so in addition
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    to that what specific and information is
    collected by Amazon the specific
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    information collected by Amazon really
    depends on the service that we spent up
    in the Amazon
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    so as Amazon Web Services as a whole
    they collect email address from us and
    our billing index so that we know how to
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    route filling back and forth people who
    build services in Amazon though they
    might collect different pieces of data
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    so if I'm running a research project and
    I build a service in Amazon then I'm
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    running that server and I might be
    collecting different pieces of data but
    as far as Amazon themselves there's very
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    little about us that they collect but
    they have it there you know like the
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    data is stored with them correct the
    data is stored with them it's encrypted
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    and they do not have access to it okay
    so it's a very interesting thing because
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    if you're familiar with the concept of a
    data center where big building lots of
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    servers Amazon controls access to the
    data center so they make sure that
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    somebody off the street can't come in
    and just steal servers we control access
    to the data and the services that we
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    build upon the data center and that's
    something that Amazon makes very clear
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    is that they don't have access to the
    services that we provide they only have
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    access to the physical data center ok so
    it's a it's a kind of a different way of
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    thinking because if we're spitting up
    services in Amazon we have to be very
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    very careful about what type of data we
    collect and who we open that up to and
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    the security policies that we enforce
    because you know it's completely
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    possible for you to create an account in
    Amazon spin up a service spin up a
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    server and collect data from people and
    not have
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    encrypted hmm so there's a lot of
    responsibility that comes back to the
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    end-user to you or me or who's ever
    building services in Amazon to
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    understand how that works to understand
    the data security pieces and to make
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    very wise decisions okay
    that's we take that very very seriously
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    and any time that we are spinning up
    services or we're providing service to
    Amazon that's a discussion that we have
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    yeah that's important it's very very
    important yeah
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    do you think OSU is transparent enough
    when it comes to which company's process
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    and store student data I have to think
    so mostly because the companies that we
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    use you as a students see every day so
    you see the canvas the Google the Box
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    you see the type of data that goes in
    there because you have your it's
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    interactive and you're you're
    interacting it with every with it every
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    day you know to take canvas as an
    example you see the type of class
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    information that's there because you see
    your course curriculum you see the
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    assignments the presentations you know
    that's the type of data that each of
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    those companies hold for us and you have
    direct access into it what a student be
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    able to attend OSU but abstain from
    using services from third parties I
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    think it would be really difficult these
    days hmm I mean what would you like be
    without canvas yeah or BOTS or Google I
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    mean I presume you have worked on their
    document together in Google you know I
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    emailed you from yeah you emailed me
    from Google I think it'd be pretty hard
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    yeah what do you what do you think I
    that's that's the thing it's like it
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    would be almost impossible to manage
    financial statements from you know
    student the student tab to look at you
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    know courses to see homework it would be
    or schedule an advising appointed get a
    syllabus yeah you can't you can't give
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    it like they don't hand that physic
    syllabi I know
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    so it's it's it seems that education
    isn't instead of a single entity it's
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    you know placing part of itself and
    growing in other places and it's you you
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    have to make that trade-off yeah
    and before you I guess in historically
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    it was you know buying books or
    financially like you'd have to trade
  • 20:04 - 20:11
    your money to access education now it's
    trading information and money it's kind
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    of it's and there's always been that
    trade-off so it's it's interesting it's
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    not it's not really it's not your choice
    yeah so it's it's pretty in with the
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    value of education yeah it it really
    opens up yeah issues yeah
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    just as on processes I think it'd be
    it'd be really hard mm-hmm to come to
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    school and not use your Gmail and to
    you'd be at a serious disadvantage yeah
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    I'm not quite sure how that was working
    yeah um also quizzes yeah literally and
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    just couldn't take quizzes yeah
    so that's something else you know I will
  • 20:54 - 20:58
    I will add one thought to that though
    something that I don't you may bring it
  • 20:58 - 21:03
    up but something that we're pretty
    careful about though are the services
  • 21:03 - 21:08
    that we subscribe to and their ability
    to provide services to disabled students
  • 21:08 - 21:13
    because I think it's pretty easy for you
    and I to use our laptop and access
  • 21:13 - 21:17
    things on the internet someone who's
    blind or can't hear or he and talk
  • 21:17 - 21:21
    though as as a very very different game
    you know a very different experience and
  • 21:21 - 21:28
    so we make sure that that the services
    that we do subscribe to our applicable
  • 21:28 - 21:31
    to students with any type of disability
    and they're there there are different
  • 21:31 - 21:35
    certifications that these companies have
    to go through difficult to prove that so
  • 21:35 - 21:39
    you know it's pretty easy for you and I
    to pick up our phones and do things
    someone who can't see though that's a
  • 21:41 - 21:44
    very
    ball game from him so you know just kind
  • 21:44 - 21:49
    of just that's just gonna random but it
    baby I know that's it yeah that though
  • 21:49 - 21:54
    and with disabilities and health
    information you know that's that's also
  • 21:54 - 21:59
    stored with the school and I assume on
    you know is transmitted through Amazon
  • 21:59 - 22:04
    or infrastructure because where this
    stored
  • 22:04 - 22:09
    yeah those particular things are not
    stored in the cloud okay that that
  • 22:09 - 22:13
    particular type of information is scored
    is stored in something called banner
  • 22:13 - 22:18
    which is a which is our big student
    database for student information and
    that is on campus okay so that kind of
  • 22:20 - 22:22
    thing is
Title:
Sandbox
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You can use this Sandbox to try out things with the Amara tool.

The video that is primarily streaming here is http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZU2kyr9jRkg , which is completely blank. But you can go to the URLs tab to add the URL of another video and make it primary.

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01:46:39
Claude Almansi edited English subtitles for Sandbox
Claude Almansi edited English subtitles for Sandbox
Claude Almansi edited English subtitles for Sandbox
Claude Almansi edited English subtitles for Sandbox
Claude Almansi edited English subtitles for Sandbox
koma edited English subtitles for Sandbox
koma edited English subtitles for Sandbox
Claude Almansi edited English subtitles for Sandbox
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  • Revision 1 = provided subtitles for Lecture 1.2 of Prof. Scott Plous' Social Psychology course

  • Revision 1 = provided subtitles for Lecture 1.2 of Prof. Scott Plous' Social Psychology course

  • Revision 1 = provided subtitles for Lecture 1.2 of Prof. Scott Plous' Social Psychology course

English subtitles

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