Collaboration is not Evil: A Systematic Look at Security Research for Industrial Use
Jan Pennekamp, Erik Buchholz, Markus Dahlmanns, Ike Kunze, Stefan, Braun, Eric Wagner, Matthias Brockmann, Klaus Wehrle, Martin Henze

TL;DR
This paper presents a process cycle for interdisciplinary cybersecurity research in industrial settings, sharing experiences, a case study, and discussing challenges to advance secure industrial applications.
Contribution
It introduces a formalized process cycle for cybersecurity research in industrial contexts, supported by a case study and analysis of data management challenges.
Findings
A new process cycle for industrial cybersecurity research
Insights from a case study applying the methodology
Identification of key challenges in industrial cybersecurity
Abstract
Following the recent Internet of Things-induced trends on digitization in general, industrial applications will further evolve as well. With a focus on the domains of manufacturing and production, the Internet of Production pursues the vision of a digitized, globally interconnected, yet secure environment by establishing a distributed knowledge base. Background. As part of our collaborative research of advancing the scope of industrial applications through cybersecurity and privacy, we identified a set of common challenges and pitfalls that surface in such applied interdisciplinary collaborations. Aim. Our goal with this paper is to support researchers in the emerging field of cybersecurity in industrial settings by formalizing our experiences as reference for other research efforts, in industry and academia alike. Method. Based on our experience, we derived a process cycle of…
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