Security Lab research presented at Sunday’s “Cool Jobs” panel at the Seattle Science Festival
 The 2013 Seattle Science Festival is the region’s only large-scale, community-wide celebration of science and technology. It brings hands-on exhibits, shows, demonstrations and performances to venues throughout the Pacific Northwest. All events provide experiences that educate, engage and inspire an interest in science and technology and stimulate imagination and innovation. The festival runs June 6-16, 2013.
 The 2013 Seattle Science Festival is the region’s only large-scale, community-wide celebration of science and technology. It brings hands-on exhibits, shows, demonstrations and performances to venues throughout the Pacific Northwest. All events provide experiences that educate, engage and inspire an interest in science and technology and stimulate imagination and innovation. The festival runs June 6-16, 2013. 
SSF features a “cool jobs” series where attendees can learn, first-hand, from successful and dynamic professionals in some of the most promising fields in science and technology. CSE’s Oren Etzioni, Yoshi Kohno (Security Lab), and Helene Martin will join Code.org’s Hadi Partovi in a panel that highlights the opportunities in computer science: this Sunday, June 9th, from 7:00 to 9:00 pm, at the Seattle Public Library (Central Library) in the Microsoft Auditorium. (The event is free, but registration is required.)
Additional information here.
 Amazonians got an opportunity to play
 Amazonians got an opportunity to play  CSE professor Yoshi Kohno is profiled in the March issue of Columns, UW’s alumni magazine.
 CSE professor Yoshi Kohno is profiled in the March issue of Columns, UW’s alumni magazine.  
  Listen to Security Lab member Franzi Roesner discuss automotive computer security on a German radio station
 Listen to Security Lab member Franzi Roesner discuss automotive computer security on a German radio station  The rapid growth of sensors and algorithmic reasoning are creating an important challenge to find balance between user privacy and functionality in smart applications. To address this problem Miro Enev and collaborators have developed a quantitative framework called SensorSift which we recently published and have now made available as open source!
 The rapid growth of sensors and algorithmic reasoning are creating an important challenge to find balance between user privacy and functionality in smart applications. To address this problem Miro Enev and collaborators have developed a quantitative framework called SensorSift which we recently published and have now made available as open source!  Security Lab’s Tammy Denning presented a keynote talk and lead a play session of
 Security Lab’s Tammy Denning presented a keynote talk and lead a play session of  GeekWire picked the UW CSE Security Lab’s
 GeekWire picked the UW CSE Security Lab’s