GANNDALF will validate its offerings via multiple complementary scenarios that will be realised in real-life environments and structured within 3 Use Cases (UC): 

UC1: The technical & cybersecurity challenge: Collaborative cybercrime prevention and investigation

LEA Coordinating :PPHS

LEAs participating: ALL

In a nutshell: This use case will focus on the full exploitation of GANNDALF innovative technological offerings, to support more efficient cybercrime prevention and investigation and protection against advanced cyberthreats. It will comprise the needs and challenges of three LEAs (Poland, PJ, FIMOI) and will validate a number of complementary GANNDALF offerings to showcase how (and how much) these can indeed increase the efficiency of response to advanced cyber threats.

UC2: The collaboration challenge: Enabling data sharing and multi-stakeholder collaborations

LEA Coordinating: PJ

LEAs participating: ALL

In a nutshell: This use case will focus on addressing the need for efficient collaboration links between different stakeholders of the wider judicial ecosystem for crime investigation and prevention, as well as data sharing between different organisations or departments within an agency, optimising the balance between privacy preservation and transparency in these data sharing procedures. Special focus will be given on facilitating collaboration with different actors, including social scientists and psychologists.

UC3: The awareness raising and training challenge: Forming an ecosystem of trained and informed agencies and citizens, capable to address the challenges of advanced cybercrimes of the near future

LEA Coordinating: PLV

LEAs participating: ALL

In a nutshell: This use case aims to validate and assess the GANNDALF mechanisms that focus on raising awareness about the advanced forms of cybercrimes, engage the citizens in prevention and detection procedures, and ensure that all related investigators in the wider ecosystem are well-informed, properly trained and re- or upskilled following the advances of the ‘crime-as-a-service’ developments.