Final grades are posted in Canvas.
Please use Canvas to check your grades.
| Dates | Topics | Reading |
|---|---|---|
| 01/10 | Introduction | Class notes |
| 01/12 | Enforceability theory | Sections 1-2 of Enforceable Security Policies |
| 01/17 | Enforceability theory | Enforceable Security Policies (all) |
| 01/19 | Enforceability theory | Sections 1-2 of Run-time Enforcement of Nonsafety Policies |
| 01/24 | Enforceability theory | Run-time Enforcement of Nonsafety Policies (all, but please don't worry about the details; as always, read to get the main ideas) |
| 01/26 | Enforceability theory | Sections 1-3 of Modeling Runtime Enforcement with Mandatory Results Automata |
| 01/31 | Enforceability theory | Sections 1-5 and 8 of Modeling Runtime Enforcement with Mandatory Results Automata |
| 02/02 | Enforceability theory | A Theory of Gray Security Policies |
| 02/07 | Policy specification and composition | Sections 1-3 of Composing Expressive Run-time Security Policies (article is accessible from the USF campus network) |
| 02/09 | Policy visualization | (reading handed out in class) |
| 02/14 | Location-based policies and mobile-device security | A Location-based Policy-specification Language for Mobile Devices (article is accessible from the USF campus network) |
| 02/16 | Firewall policies; Packet classification | A Packet-classification Algorithm for Arbitrary Bitmask Rules, with Automatic Time-space Tradeoffs |
| 02/21 | Vulnerability trends; Buffer overflows | (1) Please look over, and try to get the high-level information from: 2011 CWE/SANS Top 25 Most Dangerous Software Errors; (2) then please study StackGuard: Automatic Adaptive Detection and Prevention of Buffer-Overflow Attacks |
| 02/23 | ASLR and related mechanisms | Breaking the memory secrecy assumption (paper should be accessible from the USF campus network) |
| 02/28 | Code-injection attacks: XSS and HTML5 | Code Injection Attacks on HTML5-based Mobile Apps: Characterization, Detection and Mitigation |
| 03/02 | Code-injection attacks | Sections 1-4 of Defining Code-injection Attacks |
| 03/07 | Noncode-injection attacks | Defining Injection Attacks |
| 03/09 | Crowdturfing | CrowdTarget (article is accessible from the USF campus network) |
| 03/21 | Student presentations | (Project-proposal presentations) |
| 03/23 | Student presentations | (Project-proposal presentations) |
| 03/28 | Control-flow integrity | Sections 1-5 of Control-Flow Integrity: Principles, Implementations, and Applications |
| 03/30 | Control-flow integrity; ROP | Losing Control: On the Effectiveness of Control-Flow Integrity under Stack Attacks |
| 04/04 | Information flow; Noninterference | Principles of Secure Information Flow Analysis |
| 04/06 | Quantitative Information Florw | Recent Developments in Quantitative Information Flow (please feel free to skip Sections III-V, to save time) |
| 04/11 | Temperature (hot) attacks | Using Memory Errors to Attack a Virtual Machine |
| 04/13 | Temperature (cold) attacks | Lest We Remember: Cold Boot Attacks on Encryption Keys |
| 04/18 | DRM | Lessons from the Sony CD DRM Episode |
| 04/20 | Trustworthiness | Reflections on Trusting Trust |
| 04/25 | Student presentations | (Final presentations) |