Computer and Systems Security

CS 205 - Spring 2024

OverviewSchedule/ReadingsAttack/Tool PresentationsCourse Project

Course Project

You are encouraged to form a group of 3-4 students and work on an important and interesting security-related project. Project with fewer than 3 students can only be allowed with justification and an exceptional approval from the course instructor. You are encouraged to work on a project that can tie to your own research area if security is not your main area.

Please form your group by Tuesday, April 16 and sign up in the sign-up sheet in Canvas.

Styles of research projects

Typically, you will be choosing one of the three research styles:

  1. Analyze an existing system (e.g., an operating system componenet/feature, an application, or a network protocol) to identify security risks and weaknesses. Ideally, you will be able to demonstrate real or potential flaws.
  2. Propose a new solution against a class of attacks or vulnerabilities. Typically this requires a deep understanding of the root causes of a problem. Ideally the solution should be based on an insight and a solid theoretical foundation.
  3. Measure the current status/impact of a known security threat or security solution. The purpose is to gain insight from empircal evidence, e.g., to understand the technical and non-technical barriers for adopting a security solution, or to raise awareness of certain security threats.
  4. [<=2-student team only, need instructor permission] A literature survey of a security research area, or Systematization of Knowledge (SoK). The survey scope/angle needs to be novel, for example an area that has not been surveyed before, or there are substantial more new research works to be surveyed since the last survey of the area.
 

Pre-Proposal Presentation – In Class

An in-class presentation with Q&A is scheduled for each project. The lengths of each presentation and its Q&A will be annouced in class. A representative of each group will talk about their proposed project and get feedback from the class. During the presentation, please focus on:
  1. What problems you plan to work on? Why is it important and interesting?
  2. Discuss the most important related work in the field.
  3. Your tentative approach to solve the problem.

Written Proposal (Submission via Canvas Assignments)

Please write a 3-page proposal for the course project with details on the following points:
  1. Group: Group member names and netID.
  2. Title: What would you call the eventual paper or product? Titles of survey projects need to start with "SoK:".
  3. Problem: A description of the problem you will address and why it is important.
  4. Context: A survey of related work and past approaches to the problem.
  5. Approach: How you will address the problem and how your approach differs from past work.
  6. Evaluation: How you will test how well your approach works (e.g., experimental measurements).
  7. Results: What results do you plan to include at the end of the quarter?
  8. Timeline: What are subtasks of the project and their expected delivery time?

Project Presentation – In Class, Week 10

Following the conference-style presentation. The lengths of each presentation and its Q&A will be annouced in class. Content of the talk will include all points mentioned above.

Written Project Report (Submission via Canvas Assignments)

The final report should be written in the style of a conference paper and not exceed 10-page long (including text, figures, references, and appendix if applicable). You can refer to any of the papers we read during the quarter.

A minimum structure that should be followed is: Abstract, Introduction, Related Work, Methodology, Evaluation, Future Work, and References.

The text must be formatted in two columns, using 10 point Times Roman font on 12 point leading, following the USENIX template files.  You are strongly encouraged to use LaTeX for typesetting. Here is short guide of Latext.

Other Checkpoints