Karuna Joshi receives TEDCO grant to develop cloud services broker

CSEE research professor Karuna Joshi received a $100K grant to develop an advanced prototype for a cloud service broker from the Maryland Technology Development Corporation (TEDCO). The software system will help companies and organizations negotiate for, select and procure cloud computing services based on a description of their needs and preferences.

UMBC research professor Karuna Panda Joshi

TEDCO was created by the Maryland State Legislature to facilitate the transfer and commercialization of technology from Maryland’s research universities and federal labs into the marketplace and to assist in the creation and growth of technology-based businesses in Maryland.

Dr. Joshi’s project will build on a novel framework she developed as part of her PhD dissertation for automating the process lifecycle of cloud services. She designed technology that allowed users to compare different cloud services and determine which were best suited for their needs. Her initial prototype demonstrated a system that could negotiate for and procure storaage services from a provider like Amazon Web Services.

As part of the TEDCO funded project, Dr. Joshi will develop an commercially viable enhanced cloud broker engine that can be extended to include other services, as well as do more complex matchmaking based on functional and compliance requirements.

CyberDawgs Advance to MDC3 Finals

UMBC’s intercollegiate Cyber Defense Team (the “CyberDawgs”) once again will be competing in the finals of the Maryland Cyber Challenge (MDC3) taking place on October 9th at the CyberMaryland 2013 conference in Baltimore. All three of UMBC’s teams are in the finals!

Competing against the three CyberDawgs teams will be two teams from UMUC, two from Towson, and one from Indiana Tech.

During the finals, teams will compete in a Capture-The-Flag/King-of-The-Hill hybrid event where they must attempt to gain (and maintain) control of other systems on the network – which are also being targetted by other teams seeking to gain and ‘own’ them as well.

Each member of the first place team will receive a $5,000 cash prize. and members of the second place team each receive $2,000. For the third consecutive year, cash prizes for the students are provided by the National Security Agency in the hopes of furthering students’ cybersecurity education and professional training. (UMBC is a co-founder of MDC3.)

CSEE faculty Richard Forno and Charles Nicholas serve as faculty advisors to the team.

Professor Jian Chen receives NIST grant for immersive metrology research

Interactive measurement and analysis in the immersive visualization environment at NIST.

Professor Jian Chen received a research award from the National Institute of Standard and Technology (NIST) Measurement Science and Engineering research grant program to discover new immersive metrology, visualization, and analysis tools for interacting with and understanding multi-valued volumes of large scientific data in immersive display environments.

The research will explore new approaches to integrate scientific and information visualization, optimize information access and precise measurement to recommend good default visualization, study natural and intuitive input modalities including gestural and handheld 3D inputs, and synthesize visualizations to address complex data analysis workflow. The efficacy and insights of these scientific methods will be validated in close collaboration with engineering scientists at NIST.

The research is significant because the methods will be able to address problems in three independent scientific applications at NIST: suspension rheology, body area network and tissue engineering. It will also make possible new forms of scientific research by developing new immersive analysis capabilities, integrating new approaches into experimental research, and for the first time, creating new human-computer interaction techniques to query both scientific and information visualizations to leverage human intelligence.

The award will provide nearly $440,000 over the next five years to support Professor Chen and her students in the DaVinCI (Data Visualization, Computing, and Interaction) lab working on the project.

talk: Thermal light N-qubits, 2:30 Tue 10/1 ITE325b

UMBC Quantum Computation Seminar

Thermal light N-qubits

Yanhau Shih

Physics Department, UMBC

2:30-4:00 Tuesday, 1 October 2013, ITE 325b

This talk will discuss a few recent experiments on Nth-order interference of N independent and incoherent thermal fields from their intensity fluctuation correlation measurement. The observed interference is similar to that of entangled states. These experiments have demonstrated the possibility of producing N-qubits from N incoherent thermal fields.

Yanhua Shih received his B.S. degree in theoretical physics from Northwestern University of China in 1981, and his Ph.D. in physics from the University of Maryland, College Park, in 1987. He joined the Faculty of the University of Maryland, Baltimore County in 1989 and established the Quantum Optics Program at UMBC. He is currently Professor of Physics at UMBC. His research interests include fundamental problems of quantum theory and general relativity.

Organizer: Prof. Samuel Lomonaco,

Free ebook helps teens manage online safety (this week only)

Security expert Linda McCarthy has written a 48-page book, Digital Drama: Staying Safe While Being Social Online, aimed teens and their families on how to manage online behavior to enhance safety, security and privacy. McCarthy is an author and computer security consultant with more than twenty years of industry experience in educating families, security auditing, consulting, training, research and development, and leading high-performing teams.

cover
Click to access

In support of National Cyber Security Awareness Month, Microsoft has provided support to allow her to offer free downloads of Digital Drama from Amazon in both English and Spanish. The free offer is only available this week, from today through 3:00am (EDT) Saturday, September 28.

Kim Sanchez, who heads Microsoft’s Online Safety – Trustworthy Computing Communications efforts, interviewed McCarthy last week about her new book and it’s goals. “Digital Drama has something for everyone.”, McCarty said about who she write the book for. “Parents can read it and get ideas about how to talk with their kids about online safety. Even if you don’t have kids, you’ll find guidance that will help you, a family member, or a friend. So download the ebook and share it with everyone you know.”

Here’s how the book is described on McCarthy’s site:

Every day, millions of teens log on and make decisions that can compromise their safety, security, privacy, and future. If you are like most teens, you are already using social networking sites like Twitter and Facebook and have your smartphone super-glued to your hand. You tag your friends in photos, share your location and thoughts with friends, and post jokes online that later may be misunderstood. At the same time, you might not realize how that information can affect your reputation and safety, both online and offline. We’ve all heard the horror stories of stolen identities, cyber stalking, pedophiles on the Internet, and lost job, school, and personal opportunities. All teens need to learn how to protect themselves against malware, social networking scams, and cyberbullies. This book helps you learn crucial skills:

  • Deal with cyberbullies
  • Learn key social networking skills
  • Protect your privacy
  • Create a positive online reputation
  • Protect yourself from phishing and malware scams

Microsoft (@Safer_Online) will hold an online Twitter chat at 3:00pm (EDT) on September 25 with Linda McCarthy (@ddramabook) and other online safety experts about how her ebook can help people talk with kids about digital safety. Use #ChatSTC to ask questions or join the conversation.

CSEE Prof. Nicholas receives research funding to study Malicious Software

Professor Charles Nicholas has received research funding from the National Science Foundation to develop better ways to detect malicious software (malware) and defend computers against it. The award will provide up to $75,000 over the next year to support the research of Dr. Nicholas and his students.

The process of creating malware has become more automated in recent years, as a result of so-called exploit kits, such as the Blackhole exploit kit. The UMBC project will investigate ways of characterizing these exploit kits, as well as the malware they produce. Developing models of how current kits work will help to predict what exploit kits will look like in the future as well as suggest better techniques for detecting the malware they are used to produce.

On challenging problem the research will address is dealing with polymorphic malware, malware that makes new versions of itself as it moves from machine to machine, in the hope of avoiding detection by conventional, signature-based anti-virus software. The research will characterize malware families that exist as products of a specific exploit kit as well as those that develop through polymorphism.

Dr. Nicholas is the faculty advisor of UMBC’s Cyber Defense Team, a student group that studies information security, intrusion detection, cybersecurity, and network security and participates in competitions such as the Maryland Cyber Challenge. He is also teaching a special topics class this semester on Malware Analysis for both undergraduate and graduate students.

Considering graduate school in a STEM program?

UMBC students interested in learning more about pursuing a graduate program in a STEM area should consider taking advantage of a free GEM GRAD Lab event to be held at the University of Virginia on Saturday, September 28th. UMBC is a co-sponsor, along with UVA and VA Tech and will provide free bus transportation. See here for more information and details about how to reserve a seat on the bus. The event will cover topics that include why go to graduate school, how to apply to graduate school, how to fund graduate school and voices from the field.

Narock & Finin receive NSF grant for EarthCube semantic cyberinfrastructure research

Dr. Tom Narock (Goddard Planetary Heliophysics Institute) and Professor Tim Finin (CSEE) are part of a team that receive a one-year, $300,000 award from the National Science Foundation to apply semantic technologies to support the data representation, discovery and integration needs in EarthCube, an NSF program that aims to transform geoscience research by developing community-guided cyberinfrastructure.  The collaborative project involves researchers and students from UMBC, Columbia University, Wright State University, and the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI). Narock (PI) and Finin (CO-PI) head the UMBC effort.

A wide spectrum of maturing methods and tools, collectively characterized as Semantic Web Technologies, enables machines to complete tasks automatically that previously required human direction. For the Geosciences, Semantic Web Technologies will vastly improve the integration, analysis and dissemination of research data and results. This collaborative project will conduct exploratory research applying state-of-the-art Semantic Web Technologies to support data representation, discovery, analysis, sharing and integration of datasets from the global oceans, and related resources including meeting abstracts and library holdings. A key contribution will be semantically-enabled cyberinfrastructure components capable of automated data integration across distributed repositories.

The image above shows a pyramid-shaped multicorer on the deck of the R/V Melville off Santa Barbara in October 2012. Multicorers collect seafloor sediment samples without disrupting the uppermost sediment layers and the single-celled organisms living in them. The system sends real-time images of the seafloor to scientists aboard, allowing them to guide the sampler, and collects high-resolution images that are stored in the camera for downloading on recovery. (Photo by Ellen Roosen, WHOI).

talk: Computer-Assisted Reasoning In Digital Forensics (Noon, Fri 9/20)

digital forensics

UMBC Center for Information Security and Assurance

Computer-Assisted Reasoning In Digital Forensics

Dr. Eoghan Casey

Noon-1:00 Friday, 20 September 2013

Cyber Defense Lab, room 228 ITE, UMBC

The primary challenge in digital forensics today is uncovering not the right answer, but the right question. As in any scientific discipline, the formation of viable hypotheses that ultimately uncover meaning in available evidence is a central problem in digital forensics. Such hypothesis formation, based on intuition and experience, involves an underlying mental process that can be substantially aided by computers. This seminar delves into the cognitive science of investigative reasoning, and how research in artificial intelligence can help humans find the right questions in large quantities of data. The implications of this work for digital identity and privacy, as well as its potential uses in other areas, such as medical diagnosis and virtual learning environments, are also discussed.

Eoghan Casey is an internationally recognized expert in digital forensics and data breach investigations. For over a decade, he has dedicated himself to advancing the field of digital forensics. He wrote the foundational book Digital Evidence and Computer Crime, now in its third edition, and he created advanced smartphone forensics courses taught worldwide. He has also co-authored several advanced technical books including Malware Forensics, and is Editor-in-Chief of Digital Investigation: The International Journal of Digital Forensics and Incident Response. Dr. Casey received his Ph.D. from University College Dublin, and has taught digital forensics at the Johns Hopkins University Information Security Institute.

Dr. Casey has worked as R&D Team Lead at the Defense Cyber Crime Center (DC3) helping enhance their operational capabilities and develop new techniques and tools. He has also helped organizations handle security breaches and analyzes digital evidence in a wide range of investigations, including network intrusions with international scope. He has testified in civil and criminal cases, and has submitted expert reports and prepared trial exhibits for computer forensic and cyber-crime cases.

Host: Dr. Alan T. Sherman,

Graduate Cybersecurity Program Webinar

On Wednesday, September 25, from 6:30 – 7:30PM,  Dr. Rick Forno, Cybersecurity GPD and Assistant Director of UMBC’s Center for Cybersecurity, will host an evening webinar discussing UMBC’s graduate cybersecurity programs. Topics to be discussed include:

  • Program design and curriculum  (both MPS degree & Certificate)
  • Eligibility and Application Information
  • UMBC’s approach to graduate cybersecurity education for working professionals
  • Cybersecurity scholarship opportunities
  • UMBC’s many resources for cybersecurity students

Additionally, Dr. Forno will give updated details about the upcoming Maryland Cyber Challenge (MDC3) which is part of the CyberMaryland 2013 conference in October.

Interested persons may RSVP for the free webinar here.

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