Deutsch Intern
Institute of Computer Science

20.12.2022

Informatik-Kolloquium

Auf Einladung von Prof. Dr.-Ing. Alexandra Dmitrienko findet der folgende Vortrag statt:

Dienstag, 20. Dezember 2022, 16:15 Uhr, Zuse Hörsaal, Informatikgebäude, Am Hubland

Dr. Selcuk Uluagac
Florida International University, Miami, FL, USA

Security and Privacy of IoT Apps and Devices

Abstract

Cyber space is expanding fast with the introduction of new Internet of Things (IoT) and CPS devices. Wearables, smart watches, smart glasses, fitness trackers, medical devices, Internet-connected house appliances and vehicles have grown exponentially in a short period of time. Given the increasingly critical nature of the cyberspace of these IoT devices and applications, it is imperative that they are secured against malicious activities. In this talk, I will introduce different current research projects in Cyber-Physical Systems Security Lab (CSL) (http://csl.fiu.edu) related to the security and privacy of IoT devices and applications, highlighting how different machine learning algorithms enabled impeccable results: (1) The first topic will introduce the sensory channel threats to CPS and IoT systems. I will discuss how using sensory channels (e.g., light, temperature, infrared), an adversary can successfully attack IoT/CPS applications and devices. (2) The second topic will introduce the design of a novel IoT device fingerprinting and identification framework to complement existing security solutions (e.g., authentication and access control) in identifying IoT devices (i.e., ensuring the devices are actually who they are). (3) The third topic will focus on how IoT devices deployed in smart settings (e.g., home, office) can leak sensitive information (events, activities) from different IoT apps and implementations even if the traffic is encrypted. (4) I will introduce a usable wearable-assisted continuous authentication framework where a wearable device (e.g., smartwatch) is used to authenticate a computer user continuously utilizing the motion sensors of the wearable. Finally, (5) I will share our most recent work in detecting illegal bitcoin operations (i.e., cryptojacking) that uses machine learning techniques to accurately detect the presence of unwarranted cryptomining activity in real-time.

Bio

Dr. Uluagac is currently an Eminent Scholar Chaired Associate Professor in the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering at FIU, where he leads the Cyber-Physical Systems Security Lab, with an additional courtesy appointment in the Knight Foundation School of Computing and Information Science. Before FIU, he was a Senior Research Engineer at Georgia Tech and Symantec. He holds a PhD from Georgia Tech and MS from Carnegie Mellon University. In 2015, Dr. Uluagac received a Faculty Early Career Development (CAREER) Award from the US National Science Foundation (NSF), which is NSF’s most prestigious award in support of junior faculty who exemplify the role of teacher-scholars through outstanding research, excellent education and the integration of education and research within the context of the mission of their organizations. In 2015, he was awarded the US Air Force Office of Sponsored Research (AFOSR)’s Summer Faculty Fellowship. In 2016, he received the Faculty Fellowship from the University of Padova, Italy. He has also received other awards for the quality of his mentoring and research, including (1) FIU Provost Office Top Scholar Award in Faculty with Notable Gains in Student Learning and Success (Sciences) Category, 2021, (2) FIU College of Engineering and Computing Faculty Award in Excellence in Research and Creative Activities Category, 2021, (3) FIU Eminent Scholar Chaired Associate Professor in the College of Engineering and Computing, 2020, In 2021, he received Google’s ASPIRE Research award in security and privacy and received a fellowship from the Sapienza University of Rome, Italy in 2022.

He is an expert in the areas of cybersecurity and privacy with an emphasis on their practical and applied aspects and teaches classes in these areas. He has hundreds of research papers/studies/publications in the most reputable venues. His research in cybersecurity and privacy has been funded by numerous government agencies and industry (surpassing $18M as of 11/22), including the US NSF, the US Dept. of Energy, US Air Force Research Lab, US Dept. of Labor, Cyber Florida, Google, Microsoft, Trend Micro, and Cisco, inter alia. He is very entrepreneurial and visionary with his research. Many of his research ideas have resulted in patents (17 total) with one licensed to a company recently. He is an active member of IEEE and ACM and a regular contributor to national panels and leading journals and conferences in the field. Dr. Uluagac has served on the program committees of top-tier security conferences such as IEEE S&P (Oakland), NDSS, USENIX, inter alia. He was the General Chair of ACM Conference on Security and Privacy in Wireless and Mobile Networks (ACM WiSec) in 2019. He is the TPC Co-Chair of 2022 IEEE CNS Conference. In 2018, he co-chaired the US National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST)’s National Initiative for Cybersecurity Education (NICE) Annual Expo and Conference. Currently, he serves on the editorial boards of IEEE Transactions on Mobile Computing, IEEE Communications and Surveys and Tutorials (network security lead area editor), and Elsevier Computer Networks. And, he is very active in the local and national community; his research has been covered by different media outlets (TV, online, published) numerous times. More information can be obtained from http://nweb.eng.fiu.edu/selcuk/