Anis YOUSSEF is the Chief Innovation Officer of TELNET Group and in charge of New and Innovative Products. TELNET is a group of companies founded in 1994, headquartered in Tunisia, working on high technology added-value sectors, with 30 years of experience and more than 1000 engineers and several offices in Tunisia and worldwide. Since April 2016, he leads the Research and Innovation activities of the ChallengeOne project, the first Tunisian Satellite successfully launched and placed in orbit in March 2021. Currently, he is a Line of TELNET New Space Business, managing a team of Engineers, consultants and experts in Tunisia, Europe, USA and Middle East. From January 2009 to March 2010, he was a head of railway dependability project in ANSALDO, for Banverket: Swedish Rail Administration that has overall responsibility for the rail transport system in Sweden. From June 2005 to December 2008, he joined the service 65640 (fonctions inter- systèmes) at Department of Electrical Engineering and Electronic Systems (DIESE) at Renault technology center in Guyancourt. He was responsible for the design, development and industrialization of the Features Activation Logic (FAL) computer and the after-crash management function. He also coordinated with the R&D service for the development of new prototypes for electric and hybrid vehicles optimizing the passive security. Between 2000 and 2005, he was a head of an Aerospace European project for "Flight controls of the Future" to define, design and validate a digital and dependable flight control system. He worked under a research collaboration contract between the "Manual and Automatic Flight Control systems: FCS-MO 142/4" team at Airbus Technocentre in St. Martin du Touch, Toulouse and the LAAS-CNRS (Dependable Computing and Fault Tolerance group). He received the Certified Engineer degree from ENIM in 2000, the master degree from the University of Lorraine in 2001, he had developed techniques to automate the measurement of quality services of mobile ad hoc networks and finally he received the PhD degree in Embedded Systems dependability, from the Institut National Polytechnique of Toulouse in 2005.