Congratulations Professor Geambasu!
UW CSE PhD Student Roxana Geambasu has just accepted a tenure-track faculty position in the Department of Computer Science at Columbia University. Congratulations Professor Roxana!!
Security and Privacy Research Lab
Paul G. Allen School of Computer Science & Engineering, University of Washington
UW CSE PhD Student Roxana Geambasu has just accepted a tenure-track faculty position in the Department of Computer Science at Columbia University. Congratulations Professor Roxana!!
Alexei Czeskis and Jacob Appelbaum are helping to design a privacy preserving registry for the Washington State medical marijuana data. Their effort was recently mentioned a Seattle Weekly article, available here.
Jake and Alexei have been working directly and indirectly with a variety of stakeholders like the Washington State ACLU, legislators, law enforcement, and Cannabis Defense Coalition to make sure that a technology can be designed to meet the variety of needs and the (sometimes conflicting) goals. Jake’s and Alexei’s work have helped inform the technical language in Senate Bill SB 5073 and more recently — SB 5955.
The UW CSE Security Competition Team was recognized at the 2011 VISA Global Security Summit in Washington DC. Besides high ranking VISA security personnel, the former NSA and CIA chief, the former Attorney General, a four start General, personnel from the US Secret Service, and others were present.
The team was also recently featured in The Christian Science Monitor. The story is available in the magazine and online here.
The UW CSE Security Competition Team was featured today in a story on 97.3 KIRO FM. You can read the article here and can also listen to the full audio interview here.
“Keypad: An auditing file system for theft-prone devices,” a paper describing a new file system that enhances data security on mobile devices, has been named Best Student Paper at this year’s EuroSys 2011 conference. The paper was authored by UW CSE graduate students Roxana Geambasu and John P. John and UW CSE faculty members Steve Gribble, Yoshi Kohno, and Hank Levy.
Congratulations!
The UW CSE computer security competition team consisting of Alexei Czeskis (team captain), Karl Koscher (team co-founder), Ian Finder, Mary Pimenova, Cullen Walsh, Baron Oldenburg, Conrad Meyer, and Mark Jordan — coached by Melody Kadenko — just won the National Collegiate Cyber Defense Competition!
The finals, held April 9 and 10, featured 9 teams from across the nation — the winners of 9 regional competitions.
Congratulations!!!!!
Update (4.11.2011): The Seattle Times just wrote an article about the team’s win.
Update (4.13.2011): UW Today also wrote an article about the team.
UW CSE Security Lab member Karl Koscher just won the College of Engineering Ford Motor Company Fellowship. Congratulations Karl!
From Freedom to Tinker: “Today, the public learned of a previously undisclosed compromise of a trusted Certificate Authority — one of the entities that issues certificates attesting to the identity of “secure” web sites. Last week, Comodo quietly issued a command via its certificate revocation servers designed to tell browsers to no longer accept 9 certificates. …
“This implied that the certificates were likely malicious, and may even been used by a third-party to impersonate secure sites. …
“Clearly, something exceptional happened behind the scenes. Security hacker Jacob Appelbaum did some fantastic detective work using the EFF’s SSL Observatory data and discovered that all of the certificates in question originated from Comodo — perhaps from one of the many affiliated companies that issues certificates under Comodo’s authority via their ‘Registration Authority’ (RA) program. Evidently, someone had figured out how to successfully attack Comodo or one of their RAs, or had colluded with them in getting some invalid certs.”
Jacob Appelbaum is a UW Security and Privacy Lab researcher and a Tor developer. You can read more about Jacob’s discoveries here.
The UW CSE cyber defense competition team just won regionals! Congratulations to team members Alexei Czeskis (team captain), Ian Finder, Mark Jordan, Karl Koscher, Conrad Meyer, Baron Oldenburg, Mary Pimenova, and Cullen Walsh!
Update (4.7.2011): The Seattle Times has written an article about the team: “A team of eight University of Washington students will wage war this weekend against an expert force, defending their territory with stealth tactics and on-the-fly invention. But there are no physical weapons involved. There’s not even a physical battleground. For the fourth year in a row, the team will compete in the National Collegiate Cyber Defense Competition, in which teams from around the country attempt to shield a computer system from professional hackers aiming to cause havoc ranging from stealing trade secrets to turning home pages into random YouTube videos.”
Read the full article here.
The Associated Press and The New York Times broke the story, with additional coverage at Technology Review, PCWorld, Slashdot, Jamie Zawinski’s blog, Boing Boing, and The Volokh Conspiracy. More information at the CEASS site.
Congratulations to Karl Koscher, Alexei Czeskis, and Franziska Roesner, and their University of California at San Diego collaborators Steve Checkoway, Damon McCoy, Brian Kantor, and Danny Anderson, whose study of the vulnerability of modern cars to remote compromise was picked up by the press after being presented to the