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DTSTART:20130117T120000
DTSTAMP:20130519T043018
SUMMARY:WATCH - Ultra Paranoid Computing
UID:20130117T120000-20130519T043018-126542@nsf.gov
DTEND:20130117T130000
DESCRIPTION:Ultra Paranoid Computing\n\nAbstract\n\nWhat if every CPU in the universe is your worst enemy?  News stories have told us in recent years not only about traditional computers being "pwned" by adversaries, but also the risks of computers in embedded devices like medical instruments and cars also being vulnerable to attack.  There is a lot of work on "what if one machine in your network is infected", and even some work where an adversary can pwn large numbers less than half of your network, and some where an adversary could pwn all but a handful, and there are a very small amount of work where all machines but two or three in the world are pwned.  But there is almost no work on what if adversary pwns every machine, including your laptop.  This talk will explore what happens in that case.  The work is very early, and more of a point of view than a research result or deployed system.  As part of this talk, Pat will discuss his recent work in Rubber Hose Resistant Passwords - passwords that can't be revealed even if the owner of the password seeks to reveal it, as well as his recent work in all optical cryptography for images.\n\nSpeaker\n\nDr. Patrick Lincoln is the Director of the Computer Science Laboratory of SRI International, where he has worked since 1989.  He is also the executive director of the Department-of-Homeland-Security-funded Cyber Security Research And Development Center, and he is the director of the SRI Center for Computational Biology.  Dr. Lincoln holds a Ph.D. in Computer Science from Stanford University and a B.Sc. in Computer Science from MIT.  He has previously held positions at MCC, Los Alamos National Laboratory, and ETA Systems.   Dr. Lincoln leads research in the fields of formal methods, computer security and privacy, computational biology, scalable distributed systems, and nano electronics.  He has led multidisciplinary groups to high-impact research projects including symbolic systems biology, scalable anomaly detection, exquisitely sensitive biosensor systems, strategic reasoning and game theory, and privacy-preserving data sharing.  Dr. Lincoln has published dozens of influential papers, over a dozen patents, and has served on scientific advisory boards for private and publicly-held companies, nonprofits, and government agencies and departments.\n\nTo Join the Webinar: \n\nThe Webinar will be held from 12:00-1:00pm EST on January 17, 2013 in Room 110. \n\nTo attend virtually, please register at: http://www.tvworldwide.com/events/nsf/130117/\n\nContacts\nKeith Marzullo, (703) 292-8950 kmarzull@nsf.gov\n\nView this event on the NSF web site at: http://www.nsf.gov/events/event_summ.jsp?cntn_id=126542&org=NSF
LOCATION:NSF Room 110
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