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'''Richard Lamb''' has over 35 years of engineering, business, and policy experience <ref>IEEE-USA Executive Fellow</ref> in the Internet arena. His interests have been intertwined with the progress of technology from a very early age starting with radio circuitry to integrated circuitry to computers to networking and the Internet. Currently responsible for [[DNSSEC]] efforts at [[ICANN]], he was the technical and policy architect for the Internet’s DNSSEC root key deployment <ref>IEEE Professional Achievement Award "For leadership in developing Internet security policy related to global PKI and DNSSEC"</ref><ref>[http://www.theregister.co.uk/2015/08/13/root_key_signing_ceremony/ Key Ceremony - The Register][http://www.theguardian.com/technology/2014/feb/28/seven-people-keys-worldwide-internet-security-web The Guardian]</ref><ref>[http://boingboing.net/2016/02/19/what-a-serious-keysigning-cer.html Serious Key Ceremony - Doctorow]</ref> and regularly teaches and speaks<ref>[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2bPRGabwL9k HKISOC]</ref><ref>[http://iccs.fordham.edu/program/iccs2012/richard-lamb/ ICCS]</ref><ref>[http://friendsoftheigf.org/session/335 IGF]</ref> on DNSSEC and other [[ICT]] topics. Prior to this he was Director of Global IT policy at US Department of State where he focused on helping policy makers understand various technologies. Before this, he founded a number of small networking start-ups the last acquired by [[Microsoft]] and continues to collaborate with start-ups on innovative solutions and has a number of patents. His years in the networking field have included implementation of a wide range of protocols from the bottom-up including UUCP (author of UUPC/DCP), MEP2, BiSync, SNA/SDLC, X.25, DECNET, Q.921/931, H.323, IPX, NATs, and TCP/IP/DNS. Rick received his doctorate from MIT. <ref>[https://www.linkedin.com/pub/rick-lamb/0/213/ab linkedin]</ref>
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'''Dr. Richard Lamb''' has over 35 years of engineering, business, security, and policy experience <ref>AAAS S&T Policy Fellow and IEEE-USA Executive Fellow</ref> in the Internet arena. His interests have been intertwined with the progress of technology from a very early age starting with radio circuitry to integrated circuitry to computers to networking and the Internet. Currently responsible for [[DNSSEC]] efforts at [[ICANN]], he was the technical and policy architect for the Internet’s DNSSEC root key deployment <ref>IEEE Professional Achievement Award "For leadership in developing Internet security policy related to global PKI and DNSSEC"</ref><ref>[http://www.theregister.co.uk/2015/08/13/root_key_signing_ceremony/ Key Ceremony - The Register][http://www.theguardian.com/technology/2014/feb/28/seven-people-keys-worldwide-internet-security-web The Guardian]</ref><ref>[http://boingboing.net/2016/02/19/what-a-serious-keysigning-cer.html Serious Key Ceremony - Doctorow]</ref> and regularly teaches and speaks<ref>[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2bPRGabwL9k HKISOC]</ref><ref>[http://iccs.fordham.edu/program/iccs2012/richard-lamb/ ICCS]</ref><ref>[http://friendsoftheigf.org/session/335 IGF]</ref><ref>[https://www.icann.org/news/blog/a-week-in-europe-with-rick-lamb-helping-the-internet-community-contribute-to-a-stable-and-secure-internet SCS]</ref> on DNSSEC and other [[ICT]] topics. Prior to this he was Director of Global IT policy at US Department of State where he focused on helping policy makers understand various technologies. Before this, he founded a number of small networking start-ups the last acquired by [[Microsoft]] and continues to collaborate with start-ups on innovative solutions and has a number of patents. His years in the networking field have included implementation of a wide range of protocols from the bottom-up including UUCP (author of UUPC/DCP), MEP2, BiSync, SNA/SDLC, X.25, DECNET, Q.921/931, H.323, IPX, NATs, and TCP/IP/DNS. Rick received his doctorate from MIT. <ref>[https://www.linkedin.com/pub/rick-lamb/0/213/ab linkedin]</ref>
    
==References==
 
==References==
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