CS588: Cryptology - Principles and Applications, Fall 2001
Lectures |
Manifests |
Problem Sets |
Projects |
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Syllabus |
Challenges |
Calendar
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Course Projects
Team 1: Timing Attacks on Elliptic Curve Cryptosystems (ECC) [Slides] [Report]
Zhijian Lu, Matthew Mah, Michael Neve, Eric PeetersTeam 2: CipherChess [Slides] [Report]
Adam Glaser, Emilio Lahr-Vivaz, Error McEachronTeam 3 - Security in Sensor Networks [Slides] [Report]
Tracy Barger, David Friedman, and Stavan ParikhTeam 4 - SSH Keystrokes [Slides] [Report]
Mike Hogye, Thad Hughes, Josh Sarfaty, Joe WolfTeam 5 - Steganography [Slides] [Report]
Jon Erdman, Eric Hutchins, Stephen Liang, Portman WillsTeam 6 - De-Clawing Carnivore [Slides] [Report]
Dante Guanlao, Mike Tashbook, Leonard Woody, Dana WortmanTeam 7 - UVa Healtcare System: Medical Privacy [Slides] [Report]
Keen Browne, Allison Esclapez, Eugene Lebanidze, Haiyong Wang, Jim ZengTeam 8 - National ID Card [Slides] [Report]
Saud Asad Khan Bangash, Michael Cuvelier, Chris Marinak, Adam SowersTeam 9 - Security Flaws in ITC's Public Labs [Slides] [Report]
Note: report and slides are hidden until ITC has a chance to fix these problems.
John Calandrino, Samir Roy, Brian WalshTeam 10 - Digital Watermarking for Music [Slides] [Report]
Rob Farraher, Ken Pickering, Lim Vu
Overview
Students will work in groups of 1-4 on a project related to cryptology and security. Projects may involve assessing an existing system, designing and implementing a secure application, or surveying research and policy issues on a focuses topic.See the list of project ideas to get started, but you are encouraged to propose any relevant topic you wish. Grouops are encouraged to meet with the course staff to discuss project ideas long before the proposal is due.
Project Teams
Project Presentations
Project Reports
University of Virginia Department of Computer Science CS 588: Cryptology - Principles and Applications |
David Evans evans@virginia.edu |