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CASED is funded by

Landes-Ofensive Entwicklung Wissenschaftlich-ökonomischer Exzellenz

Distinguished Lecture Series in Cybersecurity

With the Distinguished Lectures Series in Cybersecurity, every semester, we bring outstanding experts from science and industry to Darmstadt, in order to discuss the multi-faceted prospects and challenges of IT Security. In the lectures, the speakers present the results of trend-setting research a variety of disciplines, give overviews of complex topics or show the current state of knowledge in their field of research.

The lectures are free and open for everybody without prior registration. CASED, CRISP and CROSSING members are particularly encouraged to attend these lectures.

You will find all slides that we are allowed to publish in our archive next to the speaker´s name.


Summer 2016

When:
On selected thursdays
during lecture period
always 4:15 - 5:15 pm

Where:

TU Darmstadt
Piloty Building S2|02

Room C 110
Hochschulstraße 10
64289 Darmstadt

Prof. Dr. Alessandro Orso

Prof. Dr. Alessandro Orso
"Automated Debugging: Are We There Yet?"

Georgia Institute of Technology

April 28, 2016, 4:15-5:15 p.m. ICS download

Software debugging, which involves localizing, understanding, and removing the cause of a failure, is a notoriously difficult, extremely time consuming, and human-intensive activity. This talk provides an overview of the state of the art in the broader area of software debugging, presents our research on assessing strengths and weaknesses of the main existing debugging techniques, discusses a set of open challenges in this area, and sketches future research directions that may help address these challenges.

Further Information on Prof. Dr. Alessandro Orso

Prof. Dr. Pepijn W. H. Pinkse

Prof. Dr. Pepijn W. H.  Pinkse
"Quantum-Secure Authentication of Physical Optical Keys"

University of Twente, Enschede, Netherlands

May 12, 2016, 4:15-6:15 p.m. ICS download

Authentication is a crucial factor in security.  Authentication can be based on “what you have” or on “what you know”, i.e. traditional physical or digital keys. Both can be easily copied. The modern version of the traditional physical key is the Physical Unclonable Function (PUF): an object that cannot feasibly be copied because of the inherent randomness in its manufacture.

Continue

Further Information on Prof. Dr. Pepijn W. H. Pinkse

Coordination

CASED
Cornelia Reitz
Mornewegstraße 32
64293 Darmstadt
Phone: +49 6151 16-4895
E-mail: pr{at}cased.de