Shrirang Mare to Join UW CSE as a Postdoc

We are excited to announce that Shrirang Mare will join UW CSE in the fall as a postdoc. Shrirang is receiving his PhD from Dartmouth College, and his interests include security and privacy issues in pervasive computing, particularly in healthcare, usable security, and continuous authentication. At UW he will be working with Profs. Richard Anderson, Yoshi Kohno, and Franzi Roesner at the intersection of digital financial services and computer security. Welcome Shrirang!

Miro Enev in Wired

As part of his PhD Dissertation, lab alumnus Miro Enev studied whether a computer attached to a car’s internal computer network could “fingerprint” (identify) the driver. Wired got excited about the work and interviewed Miro. See the resulting article here. A conference version of the upcoming paper, co-authored with lab member Alex Takakuwa, alumnus Karl Koscher, and faculty member Yoshi Kohno will appear at PETS 2016. Great job team!

Lucy Simko wins an NSF Graduate Research Fellowship

Congratulations to UW CSE Security Lab member Lucy Simko! Lucy received one of this year’s National Science Foundation (NSF) Graduate Research Fellowship. NSF’s Graduate Research Fellowship Program supports outstanding student researchers pursuing Masters and doctoral degrees in science, technology, engineering and mathematics who demonstrate the potential to have a significant impact in their fields. Nearly 17,000 students applied for a total of 2,000 fellowships awarded nationwide. Receiving an NSF Fellowship is a huge honor. Congratulations Lucy!

Security Lab Alumnus Karl Koscher @ RSA

UW CSE Security Lab alumnus Karl Koscher was an invited panelist today at the RSA conference, in San Francisco. Karl participated in a panel entitled “Do We Need Cyber-Ratings for the Auto Industry?” Karl drew on his deep expertise in automotive security. In 2010 and 2011 he, along with other UW and UCSD co-authors, published two of the first papers analyzing the computer security properties of modern automobiles. That work led to significant impact in both industry and governemnt, was covered in two NOVA TV episodes, and was featured on 60 Minutes.

Camille Invited to Speak at the NCWIT Aspiration Awards Ceremony in Kirkland, WA

UW CSE Security Lab member Camille Cobb was invited to present to the National Center for Women and Information Technology (NCWIT) Aspirations Award winners this past weekend. The award ceremony was held at Google Kirkland, with roughly 20 young women award recipients present. Camille surveyed the broad field of computer security, and also offered a focused discussion of her work on computer security for developing world applications. Thank you Camille!

Yoshi at Enigma

This year USENIX introduced a new conference: the Enigma. Some think that Enigma is destined to be one of the hottest new security conferences out there. This year USENIX invited Security Lab co-director Yoshi Kohno to speak about his work on security and privacy for the Internet of Things. Check out his talk, which will be online here.

Highlighting the Lab’s Augmented Reality + Security Research

Since 2013, the UW CSE Security Lab has helped lead the charge in tackling an emerging challenge: computer security for augmented reality devices. Today, the lab launched a new website focused on its augmented reality efforts. Readers can now track the lab’s efforts on augmented reality and security here: http://ar-sec.cs.washington.edu/. Lab member Kiron Lebeck will present his latest research results on augmented reality security, with professors Franzi Roesner and Yoshi Kohno, at HotMobile 2016.

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