|
Group
ID |
Group Member (Major) |
Topic |
Presentation Time*
|
| 1 |
HESTER
LEE CARLIN (CSE) L'HOMMEDIEU DANIEL ADAM(CSE) SOLOMON DAVID MICHAEL (CPTR/INF) |
Network vulnerability assessment. | 1, Feb. 27, 11:30 - 11:45AM |
| 2 |
GERARD RAYMOND JOSEPH (CSE) | Securing Copyrighted Materials. I will look into the various methods employed by corporations to secure their copyrighted material while maintaining accessibility for authorized users. Additionally I will discuss the various threats and attacks employed by unauthorized users seeking use of the material and authorized users who seek to share the materials with authorized users. I plan to focus primarily on material that has been widely distributed. Examples include licensed software, music, text, and video. | 2: Feb. 27, 11:45 - 12:00PM |
| 3 |
CASPARY
ERIC J (CSE) GIALLOURAKIS WILLIAM G (CPTR/INF) |
A criminal case relating to information security. your paper/presentation should describe in some detail what the nature of the crime was, how information security was an issue, and what laws were applied. You could/should also discuss how digital evidence pertaining to the case was handled, whether the applicable laws seem to be well thought-out, whether there is missing legislation, and how advances in technology might affect similar situations in the future. | 3: Feb. 27, 12:00 - 12:15PM |
| 4 |
SCHEY NATHAN CHRISTOPHE (CSE) | Wi-Fi Encryption (WEP) | 4: March 1, 11:30-11:45AM |
| 5 |
TUTY HENDRA HARIANTO (CSE) | what phishing is,what their targets are,how they do it,what damage it causes,what tools they use to do it,how to prevent that | 5: March 1, 11:45 - 12:00PM |
| 6 |
ROCK BRIAN MICHAEL (CSE) | Investigation of common hacking tools and attacks. An in depth analysis of packet sniffers, password crackers, IP spoofing, and Timing attacks. My research would answer such questions as what happens at the various levels of the OSI model during these attacks and how do these tools work. The report would focus on the technology behind the attacks | 6: March 1, 12:00 - 12:15PM |
| 7 |
PRICE CHRISTOPHER
R (CPTR/INF) WALTERS BRANDON GEORGE (CSE) |
case study on the malicious “Code Red” worm. We will discuss the worm in detail and what Internet vulnerability it exploits. We will also talk about the use and spread of the worm and victims it affects analyzing how or why the worm was so successful. Last we will look at prevention. Could this worm infestation have been avoided, why was the vulnerability left unaddressed to be exploited. What actions have been or need to be taken to correct the exploit and removal of the worm. Through our study of the worm, we hope to better our knowledge of Internet vulnerabilities and possibly point out other vulnerabilities that can be exploited. | 7: March 3, 11:30-11:45AM |
| 8 |
CZAP
DEBRA ANN (CONT EDU) KELLER PATRICIA E (PRE-HIMS) AMINI ALIREZA (CONT EDU) |
Malware: What is malware, the importance of a clean machine, malware prevention. | 8: March 3, 11:45 - 12:00PM |
| 9 |
HECKLER
DANIEL JOSEPH (CSE) SHELDON MARK ANDREW (ITALIAN) |
Investigate provisions of the Patriot Act pertaining to Information Security, particularly as it relates to computer.I would investigate what effects the legislation has on the relationships between national security concerns and privacy rights, how the act affects the implementation of security measures, and what information security costs and advantages are associated with having this law. I would look at these questions from personal, business and public perspectives. | 9: March 3, 12:00 - 12:15PM |
| 10 |
BAI XIAOLE (CSE) | Worm: Definition, working mechanism, damage, detection technology, new worm technology | 10: March 6, 11:30 - 11:45AM |
| 11 |
ZHENG LEI (INTL BUS) | laws regarding to information security or specifically on anti-spam law | 11: March 6, 11:45 - 12:00PM |
| 12 |
BERGMAN
SHAIN SHAUL(INFO SYS) NEIDERMAN ELIZABETH (CPTR/INF) JEYANDRAN SAMUEL S(INFO SYS) |
Cross-site scripting | 12: March 6, 12:00 - 12:15PM |
| 13 |
BETTERIDGE
BRANDON JOHN (CPTR/INF) PETERSHEIM MICHAEL SHAWN (CSE) |
Social Engineering. We are planning to discuss the topic in general, its typical manifestations (both physical and computer-based), the different types of security it can bypass and how it accomplishes this, some examples of the behavior, and how to reduce its manifestations and reduce their effects. | 13: March 8,
11:30 - 11:45AM |
| 14 |
BALOGH KENNETH
WILLIAM (ECE) LAFFERTY AARON MARSHALL (INT STDS) |
Security Technologies:
Penetration Testing Present why penetration testing should be used to measure the effectiveness of security measures. The different types of penetration tests. Along with the various organizations which deal with the creation of such tests and testing standards such as Open Source Security Testing Methodology Manual (OSSTM) and Open Web Security Project (OWASP). |
14: March 8, 11:45 - 12:00PM |
| 15 |
KIM JASON J (CPTR/INF) | Sony Rootkits. 1. What Rootkits are, how they are threats and why its dangerous;2. Why Sony used them, how they used them etc.;3. The Ethics/Politics of the issue. | 15: March 8, 12:00 - 12:15PM |
* We will have the survey presenations
in the last two weeks of this quarter. The numbers in this column represent
the order of presentations. The exact presentation time will be posted later.
Each presentation will last 15 mintues.