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CATEGORIES:Computer Laboratory Security Seminar
SUMMARY:SCION: Scalability\, Control\, and Isolation On Ne
 xt-Generation Networks  - Prof. Adrian Perrig\, De
 partment of Computer Science at the Swiss Federal 
 Institute of Technology (ETH)
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20131118T140000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20131118T150000
UID:TALK48354AThttp://talks.cam.ac.uk
URL:http://talks.cam.ac.uk/talk/index/48354
DESCRIPTION:*Abstract:*\nWe present the first Internet archite
 cture designed to provide route\ncontrol\, failure
  isolation\, and explicit trust information for\ne
 nd-to-end communications. SCION separates ASes int
 o groups of\nindependent routing sub-planes\, call
 ed trust domains\, which then\ninterconnect to for
 m complete routes. Trust domains provide natural\n
 isolation of routing failures and human misconfigu
 ration\, give\nendpoints strong control for both i
 nbound and outbound traffic\,\nprovide meaningful 
 and enforceable trust\, and enable scalable routin
 g\nupdates with high path freshness. As a result\,
  our architecture\nprovides strong resilience and 
 security properties as an intrinsic\nconsequence o
 f good design principles\, avoiding piecemeal add-
 on\nprotocols as security patches. Meanwhile\, SCI
 ON only assumes that a\nfew top-tier ISPs in the t
 rust domain are trusted for providing\nreliable en
 d-to-end communications\, thus achieving a small T
 rusted\nComputing Base. Both our security analysis
  and evaluation results\nshow that SCION naturally
  prevents numerous attacks and provides a\nhigh le
 vel of resilience\, scalability\, control\, and is
 olation. \n\n*Bio:*\nAdrian Perrig is a Professor 
 of Computer Science at the Department of\nComputer
  Science at the Swiss Federal Institute of Technol
 ogy (ETH) in\nZürich\, where he leads the network 
 security group. From 2002 to 2012\,\nhe was a Prof
 essor of Electrical and Computer Engineering\, Eng
 ineering\nand Public Policy\, and Computer Science
  (courtesy) at Carnegie Mellon\nUniversity. He ser
 ved as the technical director for Carnegie Mellon'
 s\nCybersecurity Laboratory (CyLab). He earned his
  Ph.D. degree in\nComputer Science from Carnegie M
 ellon University under the guidance of\nJ. D. Tyga
 r\, and spent three years during his Ph.D. degree 
 at the\nUniversity of California at Berkeley. He r
 eceived his B.Sc. degree in\nComputer Engineering 
 from the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in\
 nLausanne (EPFL). Adrian's research revolves aroun
 d building secure\nsystems -- in particular securi
 ty of future Internet architectures. 
LOCATION:Lecture Theatre 2\, Computer Laboratory\, William 
 Gates Building
CONTACT:Laurent Simon
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