Thierry Rakotoarivelo


Dr. Thierry Rakotoarivelo

Principal Research Scientist,
Privacy Technology Group
Software and Computational Systems Program
Data61, CSIRO

Contact

email: Thierry.Rakotoarivelo@data61.csiro.au


Short Bio

Thierry’s research focuses on the privacy and confidentiality of sensitive information in emerging technologies, such as AI systems. He is interested in:

  • the design and use of frameworks to better understand and assess privacy challenges and risks,
  • the development of safe and trustworthy technologies to control these issues in real-word applications.

Before joining CSIRO, Thierry was a Senior Researcher with NICTA (National ICT Australia). He designed protocols, frameworks and tools for large scale testbeds (i.e. ORBITGENIPlanetLab and FIRE), reproducible experiments, and their usage in computing and networking courses (FORGE)

Thierry completed his PhD in cotutelle with the University of New South Wales (UNSW, Australia) and the Institut National Polytechnique of Toulouse (INPT, France). His thesis on Quality-of-Service (QoS) enhanced alternate paths on overlay networks received the Prix Léopold Escande award from INPT (2007). Prior to that, Thierry was a Senior Research Engineer at Motorola Australia Research Centre (MARC, now closed), developing QoS technology for mission critical wireless networks.

Some Current Activities:

Publications

Thierry’s Publication List from CSIRO ePublish repository

Thierry’s Publication List from Google Scholar

Patents

  1. Peter Runcie, Athanassios Boulis, Maximiliam Ott, Rodney Berriman, Yuriy Tselishchev, Thierry Rakotoarivelo, Integrity of a civil structure, US Patent Application US20150142337 A1.
  2. Christopher Ware, Thierry Rakotoarivelo, System and method for adaptive polling in a WLAN, US Patent Grant US7085256 B2.
  3. Christopher Ware, Raad Raad, Thierry Rakotoarivelo, Adaptive scheduling window management for a quality of service enabled local area network, US Patent Grant US6961311 B2.
  4. Christopher Ware, Randy Ekl, Thierry Rakotoarivelo, Method and system for multicast scheduling in a WLAN, US Patent Application US20050135317 A1.