Loïc Rouch works as a research and development engineer at Inria. He worked for three years as an apprentice engineer at Inria in the High Security Laboratory. The High Security Lab in Nancy is a unique platform in the French academic landscape in France allowing all types of sensitive experiments in cybersecurity with long-term storage and computational capacities. It includes many sensors such as honeypots or a dark space but also allows the execution of malware in a controlled environment. During his work, L. Rouch was in charge of restructuring the overall physical and logical infrastructure to enhance its security and maintainability, creating and deploying digital vaults, and assessing the security of Z-Wave devices. He earned his master degree in Computer Science from Telecom Nancy, Université de Lorraine, France after those three years. He is now engineer at Inria where he is particularly involved in a major project aiming at building new services on top of the High Security Lab for end-users (not only experts). This project aims at refining data collected by providing new sensor types for both collecting external information (darknet, blacklists, captured passwords on honeypots, etc.) and end-user specific one (DNS requests, traffic, types of devices/applications, etc.), aggregating all these several sources of informations within a unique analytics platform and providing intuitive data reports and dashboards to users about security events.