Computer Security

CS 255 - Winter 2017

OverviewSchedule/ReadingsAttack/Tool PresentationsCourse Project

Course Project

You are encouraged to form a group of 2 to 3 students and work on an important and interesting security-related project, although individual project is allowed with justifications. You are encouraged to work on a project that can tie to your own research area if security is not your main area.

Styles of research projects

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

Resources (you do not have to choose from the list)

Please check the course materials on ilearn about the list of potential research projects. You are encouraged to propose your own project.

Pre-Proposal Presentation – In Class (Feb 1 and Feb 3)

An in-class 3-min presentation is scheduled on Feb 1 and Feb 3. A representative of each group will talk about their proposed project and get feedback from the class. During the presentation, please focus on:

Written Proposal – Due Wednesday, Feb 8 (submit through email to cs255@cs.ucr.edu with subject "CS 255 - Proposal")

A 3-page proposal is due on Feb 8. The format follows that of pre-proposal presentation. Please elaborate each point. In addition, please describe:

Project Presentation – In Class, week 10

Following the conference-style presentation, each presentation is 10min long, with 8min talk and 2min Q&A. Content of the talk will include all points mentioned above.

Written Project Report – Due Mar 21 (submit through email to cs255@cs.ucr.edu with subject "CS 255 - Project Report")

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