The PRESERVE Project at EEITE 2025

EEITE2025

By the Center for Security Studies (KEMEA)

The EEITE 2025 Conference took place from 4-6 June 2025 at Chania, Crete, with the Centre for Security Studies presenting a poster that shared key findings from the PRESERVE project and sparked insightful discussions!

The EEITE annual conference aims to constitute a dynamic platform where leading experts, researchers, and practitioners come together to share their latest findings, engage in vibrant discussions, and forge collaborations that will propel the field of Electronic Engineering forward. Through a carefully curated program featuring keynote speeches, technical sessions, workshops, and tutorials, the EEITE 2025 conference analysed the frontiers of Electronics, covering a broad range of topics such as Internet of Things (IoT), Artificial Intelligence (AI), Microwave, Millimeter wave and Terahertz Communication, 5G and 6G Wireless Networks, Textile, Wearable and Smart Antennas, Photonics & Optical Communications, Cybersecurity, STEM & Education and more.

The Center for Security Studies, represented by George Kokkinis, presented a poster highlighting key information from the scientific publication “The Future of Law Enforcement: How PRESERVE’s AI and Big Data Solutions Benefit Public Safety”.

The aforementioned publication, written by Freideriki Makri, Sotirios Spantideas, George Kokkinis, Nikolaos Kapsalis, Pedro Alonso Doval, Marcos Varveris, and Ines Ortega-Fernandez, explores how the PRESERVE technological solution can assist LEAs in their investigations in the volatile security landscape. More precisely, the publication outlines the PRESERVE technological blocks and delves into the project Use Cases that work as examples of the PRESERVE tool’s applicability to real-life situations.

The project generated significant interest among participants, and several questions were raised about security and public safety. We would like to thank all participants who dropped by and contributed to our discussions while expressing their interest in the PRESERVE project.