Books
Monique Morrow has written and contributed to a wide range of books in the tech industry. From technical books to forward looking books about the future of technology and how it will impact the human race.
Intercloud: Solving Interoperability and Communication in a Cloud of Clouds (Networking Technology) by Monique Morrow, Jazib Frahim, Venkata Josyula, Ken Owens
The Internet Of Women editors Monique Morrow, Nada Anid, Laurie Cantileno, Rahilla Zafar
Disrupting Unemployment contributor Monique Morrow
MPLS and Next-Generation Networks by Monique Morrow, Kateel Vijayananda
Developing IP-Based Service by Monique Morrow, Kateel Vijayananda
MPLS VPN Security by Monique Morrow, Michael Behringer
Journal of Ict Standardization 2-1; Special Issue on Cloud Security and Standardization by Monique Morrow
Women Know Cyber: 100 Fascinating Females Fighting Cybercrime by Steve Morgan and Di Freeze
MDPI Future Internet October 2019
Blockchain and the Tokenization of the Individual: Societal Implications by Monique Morrow and Mehran Zarrebini
River Publishers July 2014
Internet of Things Implications on ICN by Monique Marrow, Ammar Rayes, David Lake
Seamless Cloud Abstraction, Model and Interfaces by Monique Marrow, Masum Hasan, Lew Tucker, Sree Lakshmi D. Gudreddi, Silvia Figueira
IP/MPLS OAM: Challenges and Directions by Monique Morrow, Masum Hasan, Petre Dini, Gearard Parr, Pierre Rolin
OAM in MPLS-Based Networks by Monique Morrow, Tom Nadeau, Vishal Sharma, Ph.D.
Inter-Provider Service Quality on the Internet by Monique Morrow, M,Tatipamula, A.Farrel
Interactions of Intelligent Route Control with TCP Congestion Control by Monique Morrow, Ruomei Gao, Constatine Dovrolis, Ellen Zegura, Dana Blair
Proceedings of IFIP Networking Conference, May 2007
A Cloud Based – Architecture for Cost-Efficient Applications and Services Provisioning in Wireless Sensor Networks by Monique Morrow, Paul Polakos, Cisco, Prof. Roch Glitho Concordia University
Wireless and Mobile Networking Conference April 2013
“Internet of Things: Architectural Framework for eHealth Security” by Monique Morrow, David Lake, Rodolfo A. Milito, Rajesh Vargheese
Journal of ICT Standardization, River Publishers March 2014
A Data Annotation Architecture for Semantic Applications in Virtualized Wireless Sensor Networks by Monique Morrow, Imran Khan, PhD, Rifat Jafrin, Fatima Zahra Errounda, Roch Glitho, Noel Crespi, Paul Polakos
14th IFIP/IEEE Symposium on Integrated Network and Service Management (IM 2015)
IEEE Network Magazine
Internet of Things by Monique Morrow, David Lake, Ammar Rayes
The Internet Protocol Journal September 2012
Innovation, Technology and Youth; Harnessing Lessons Learned for Strengthening Youth Participation in using Technology for Sustainable Development by Monique Morrow, Marvin Mathew, Ravi Karkara
United Nations (UN-Habitat) September 2015
RFC 6310: Pseudowire (PW) Operations, Administration, and Maintenance (OAM) Message Mapping by Monique Morrow, Yaakov Stein, M. Aissaoui, Peter Busschbach, Tom Nadeau
IETF
The Future of Work - Esko Kilpi et Al
Monique has also been published in IEEE and other journals and speaks frequently in conferences.
Monique’s numerous professional associations include the following and industry influence:
Dubai Blockchain Council, 2016-current
President of International Society Service Innovation Professionals, 2016-current
President of the Fiber to the Home (FTTH) Council Asia Pacific, 2010-2014
Vice Chair, ITU-T Telecommunications Advisory Group, for period 2013-2016
Chair of the Joint Coordination Activity (JCA) Chair on Cloud Computing, 2013-2015 Vice Chair of the ITU-T Focus Group for M2M Service Layer, 2012-2013
Vice Chair of the ITU-T Focus Group on Cloud Computing, 2010-2012
Senior Member of Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, (IEEE)
Member of IEEE Women in Engineering.
Life Member of the Association for Computing Machinery (ACM)
Standard Publications
Monique has been a leader in standards’ publications, e.g. IETF and ITU-T.
Monique was the editor for ITU-T Recommendation y.1714 (MPLS Management Framework)
Monique has the following 6 IETF RFCs:
. rfc5920 (timeline), cited by 70 RFCs
. rfc5994 (timeline), cited by no other RFCs
. rfc6310 (timeline), cited by 7 RFCs
. rfc4377 (timeline), cited by 17 RFCs
. rfc5085 (timeline), cited by 38 RFCs
. rfc5704 (timeline), cited by 3 RFCs
Videos
Monique regularly participates as a panelist or speaker (including keynote addresses and happily shares videos from her speaking engagements. Additionally, she regularly creates and shares video blogs focused on topics that she is passionate about.
Monique is President and Co-Founder of the Humanized Internet, a non-profit organization focused on providing digital identity for those individuals most underserved.
Recognized as one of the most influential technology leaders worldwide, Monique has earned honors that include Top 100 CIOs for 2016 (CIO.com), Top Women in Cloud Innovations Award 2016 (CloudNow), Social Media Presence of the Year 2016 (AI Magazine), 10 Women in Networking/Communications You Should Know, Top 10 Influential IT Women in Europe (Think Progress), 2015 Women of M2M/IoT (Connected World Magazine), and 2014 GEM-TECH Award (ITU and UN). She is a tireless advocate for women in technology and engineering, serving on multiple non-profit boards, publishing Internet of Women, Accelerating Culture Change in 2016 and facilitating the launch of the Women in Standardization Expert Group for ITU. Monique will join us to talk about the human side of technology.
Women and girls are interested in STEM fields but there are prevalent myths that may hinder them from developing this interest. Monique Morrow addresses these myths and presents options available to all that will help overcome these challenges in a three-part video series brought to you by Women in Networking on the Cisco Learning Network.
Monique Morrow, Cisco, sat down with Lisa Martin, theCUBE at the CloudNOW 5th annual 'Top Women in Cloud' Innovation Awards in Mountain View, CA
Humanized Internet with Monique Morrow
documents private and how to protect themselves against things like identity theft and fraud. Use a shredder to dispose of sensitive banking documents. Cut up your old credit cards. Don’t toss sensitive documents in the trash on the curb. Protect sensitive paperwork in a home safe or lock box.
Fast forward to today. Paper is history. Like electricity, the internet is running through charging our homes—it’s all over, the smart TV, the laptop, the smart kitchen appliances, the smart car, the phones, etc. The internet of things has obviously introduced a host of conveniences but it has also introduced a host of invisible threats and risks to our privacy.
This blog will share a few common sense measures to protect yourself in your smart home. It will also raise the question that we as an industry must think hard about. In the age of the smart home, who is ultimately responsible when problems arise, device manufacturers or service providers? The issue is complicated.
It’s not possible to predict the future. What we can do, however, is look at fast changing global patterns through a 21st century systems anthropologist lens. We can ask questions like “what if?”, “why not?” and “how?”. Let’s take a look at what the next year (and future) could behold.
Data Driven Recruiting is Here, But is it Really Up to the Job?
Advanced tech like AI is solving problems in almost every area in business, but are some of the newest solutions brought to human led departments like HR actually bringing us farther from a diverse and innovative workplace?