Dartmouth Events

Building Security and Privacy of Complex Networks and Systems from the Ground Up

Syed will first present a new adversarial reasoning technique combining the capabilities of a symbolic model checker and a cryptographic protocol verifier...

Monday, September 20, 2021
11:30am – 12:45pm
Silsby Hall 28
Intended Audience(s): Public
Categories: Lectures & Seminars

Abstract: Abstract: Security and user privacy for critical networks and cyber-physical systems are often considered as afterthoughts due to their complex functionalities and high-performance requirements. This leads to inadequate security evaluation early on the development cycle that fails to identify missing security and privacy guarantees in protocol designs. To make matters worse, unsafe practices and operational oversights stemming from unvetted simplifications of complex protocol interactions further contribute to the deviation of deployments from designs. In this talk, I will highlight how my research addresses these problems by developing principled techniques for analyzing design specifications and deployments of complex networks and cyber-physical systems that can be used for building their security from the ground up.

I will first present a new adversarial reasoning technique combining the capabilities of a symbolic model checker and a cryptographic protocol verifier that enabled us to identify 20+ new vulnerabilities in 4G and 5G cellular network design specifications. I will then discuss new side-channel attacks in 4G and 5G networks uncovered with our probabilistic reasoning technique. Next, I will talk about a fuzzing technique that is more effective than the state-of-the-art in reasoning about the correctness of an implementation when direct feedback on code coverage information is missing. Finally, I will conclude with a discussion on challenges in adapting and scaling our current approaches for a holistic analysis of 5G and next-generation cellular networks, IoT, and cyber-physical systems.

Bio: Syed Rafiul Hussain is currently an Assistant Professor in the Department of Computer Science and Engineering at Pennsylvania State University. Before joining Penn State, he worked as a postdoctoral researcher at Purdue University from where he also received his Ph.D. in December 2018. His research interests broadly lie in network and systems security with a focus on the fundamental improvement of security and privacy analysis of emerging networks and cyber-physical systems, including cellular networks and Internet-of-Things. His papers have received awards and nominations, including ACSAC’19 distinguished paper award, NDSS’19 distinguished paper award honorable mention, and EWSN’17 and ICDCS'21 best paper award nominations. He has been inducted in the Hall of Fame Mobile Security Research by the GSMA for his contribution in identifying 20+ new protocol flaws in 4G and 5G cellular networks. His findings led to several changes in the 4G and 5G cellular protocol designs and in operational networks. His work has also been featured by mass media outlets worldwide, including the New York Times, Washington Post, Forbes, MIT Technology Review, ACM TechNews, and The Register. More details can be found at https://syed-rafiul-hussain.github.io/.

For more information, contact:
Susan Cable

Events are free and open to the public unless otherwise noted.