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  • CS Colloquia: Network Resilience to Attack and Disaster

    Thu, Jan 17, 2008 @ 03:30 PM - 05:00 PM

    Thomas Lord Department of Computer Science

    Conferences, Lectures, & Seminars


    Title: Network Resilience to Attack and DisasterSpeaker: Prof. Dan Rubenstein (Columbia)ABSTRACT:
    Traditional network design can compensate for a small number of node
    and link failures, but cannot handle attacks or failures on a massive
    scale. These massive-scale phenomena may be due to malicious behavior
    in the network, such as a denial of service attack, or due to
    disaster, such as an emergency sensor network deployed in a
    catastrophic location such as a fire or flood. A primary focus of our
    research has been to design or enhance routing protocols so that they
    are more resilient to these massive-scale challenges. The talk will
    first cover the Secure Overlay Services (SOS) architecture we proposed
    that utilizes network overlays to proactively protect targeted
    Internet sites from distributed denial of service (DDoS) attacks.
    Next, we will explore the problem of maximizing the amount of data
    that can be extracted to a base-station from a sensor network whose
    nodes are undergoing rapid failures. We develop a novel distributed
    network coding technique and demonstrate how, in a massive failure
    setting, our coding/routing technique outperforms prior state-of-the-art. I
    will finish the talk with a brief run-through of other projects that
    our lab has focused on.BIO:
    Dan Rubenstein is an Associate Professor of Electrical Engineering and
    Computer Science at Columbia University. He received a B.S. degree in
    mathematics from M.I.T., an M.A. in math from UCLA, and a PhD in computer
    science from University of Massachusetts, Amherst. His research interests are
    in network technologies, applications, and performance analysis, with a
    substantial emphasis on resilient and secure networking, distributed
    communication algorithms, and overlay technologies. He has received an NSF
    CAREER Award, an IBM Faculty Award, the Best Student Paper award from the ACM
    SIGMETRICS 2000 conference, and a Best Paper award from the IEEE ICNP 2003
    Conference.

    Location: Seaver Science Library (SSL) - 150

    Audiences: Everyone Is Invited

    Contact: CS Colloquia

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