Penelope Schankula, a Cheriton School of Computer Science student who helps build cybersecurity systems

Friday, December 2, 2022

The following is a condensed article by Rose Simone; see original at /magazine/fall-2022/feature/cybersecurity-builders

Penelope Schankula (BCS in progress) is a builder. She may not have been aware of that when she took a co-op job at the cybersecurity company Arctic Wolf in 蓝莓视频, but she is part of a new generation helping build the region鈥檚 cybersecurity cluster today.

Dozens of companies in the region are providing cybersecurity, embedded security, risk threat assessments, blockchain security, cryptography and quantum cryptography services for Canada and the world. The University of 蓝莓视频 continues to advance cybersecurity innovation, making it a hotbed for talent for fintech companies, insurance companies and banks, including RBC, which invested in a cybersecurity lab at the university in 2018.

Penelope sees this growing cluster and realizes she is part of something bigger.

photo of Penelope Schankula

Penelope Schankula is an undergraduate student聽at the Cheriton School of Computer Science with a passion for machine learning and software development.

鈥淭his has been growing for quite a while, so I am not on the ground floor, but I feel like I am contributing to that growth. A lot of computing technology companies come and go in 蓝莓视频, but this is not just a fad. Cybersecurity is here to stay,鈥 adds Penelope, who has completed her second year in computer science. This was her second co-op term at Arctic Wolf.

Tony LaMantia (BA 鈥87), president and CEO of 蓝莓视频 EDC, the economic development corporation that is a point of contact for companies looking to locate, relocate or expand in 蓝莓视频, says the cybersecurity ecosystem in 蓝莓视频 Region is globally significant.

鈥淭here are three words that I would use to describe the ecosystem: diverse, dynamic and dense,鈥 he said.

By diverse, I mean our cluster is uniquely broad, covering everything from cybersecurity in general as well as risk and threat assessment, embedded security, vehicle-to-vehicle authentication and security infrastructure, blockchain security, fintech security, cryptography and quantum cryptography. So, it is diverse and dynamic,鈥 he said.

It is also dense in terms of the number of companies relative to the size of the region. Some of these companies are within blocks of one another. 鈥淲e just punch above our weight in terms of cybersecurity,鈥 he adds.

This abundant talent in computer science, mathematics and quantum computing has resulted in numerous homegrown start-ups in this space and has also drawn international companies looking for talent.

He cites the example of the late Scott Vanstone (BMath 鈥70, MMath 鈥71, PhD 鈥74), a mathematician and cryptographer in the Faculty of Mathematics, who along with ECE Professor Gordon B. Agnew (BASc 鈥78, PhD 鈥82), an engineering professor, and Distinguished Professor Emeritus Ron Mullin (BA 鈥60, PhD 鈥64) in Combinatorics and Optimization, founded Certicom in 1985.

Certicom was acquired by BlackBerry in 2009. BlackBerry Certicom has industry-leading expertise in elliptic curve cryptography and has established the world鈥檚 largest ECC- based patent portfolio.

And before that, the university attracted the late Distinguished Professor Emeritus William Tutte (DMath 鈥87), who was one of the in England during the Second World War. After Professor Tutte arrived in Canada and took a position at 蓝莓视频 in 1962, he helped build a top-rated Faculty of Mathematics that attracted some of the brightest minds in the field. That too helped foster the cybersecurity sector.

Today鈥檚 computing technology is rapidly evolving, which is why the cybersecurity industry is eager for talented young people interested in blockchain, quantum computing, and machine learning and artificial intelligence, areas in which the university has considerable expertise.

Penelope, for example, has been working with the Arctic Wolf team that is developing the company鈥檚 machine learning platform. 鈥淭he applications that are being built will allow the company to leverage machine learning to achieve its goals in reducing cyber risk,鈥 she said.

As a teenager, Penelope loved playing with computers, but she initially considered going into theoretical physics.

She changed her mind when she saw the range of opportunities offered by the Cheriton School of Computer Science. 鈥淚 discovered that I could do something cutting edge, in demand, that I could leverage economically,鈥 she said.聽But more importantly, she saw the opportunity to do some good in the world.

Popular movies like War Games have thrilling scenes of young hackers breaking into top-secret computers, but Penelope says cybersecurity, the opposite side of that coin, can be just as exciting. 鈥淚 would rather work for a company that is protecting people, and protecting their data, than a company whose primary source of profit is stealing their data.鈥

Penelope has also become part of a growing trend of women getting into the cybersecurity space. According to market research company Cybersecurity Ventures, women held 25 per cent of cybersecurity jobs globally in 2021, up from 20 per cent in 2019.

The team Penelope works with during her co-op terms at Arctic Wolf includes women who are full-time developers and other female co-op students like herself. 鈥淚n our company, there is a very large focus on promoting diversity,鈥 she said.

For her third year, Penelope will be at the University of Strathclyde in Glasgow, Scotland, as part of an academic exchange program. 鈥淚t鈥檚 an awesome opportunity to experience another culture in a different place and gain some new experiences,鈥 she said.

Penelope is not certain exactly where her career will lead after she graduates from 蓝莓视频 but hopes it might integrate machine learning and cybersecurity. The fact that cybersecurity is constantly changing and evolving with new technologies makes it an exciting field, she adds. 鈥淧eople are always finding new ways to attack systems and so we鈥檙e always finding new ways to stop them.鈥