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Georgia Tech Researchers Awarded $7.5 Million From Office of Naval Research for Secure Stack

Santosh Pandey

Atlanta, GA, March 8, 2018: A team of Georgia Tech researchers from the School of Computer Science (SCS), including Indian-American Santosh Pandey, has been awarded $7.5 million from the Office of Naval Research to develop a customized attack-resistant software stack.

SCS Assistant ProfessorĀ Bill HarrisĀ is the principal investigator on the project and is collaborating with ProfessorsĀ Wenke LeeĀ andĀ Alessandro Orso, Associate ProfessorĀ Santosh Pande, and Assistant ProfessorĀ Taesoo Kim.

The researchers are working on a technique for reducing whatā€™s known as the attack surface, the total number of ways in which a program can be vulnerable to exploit. Most general-purpose software includes code that not every user needs, and unused code can create an opportunity for exploit for an attacker. Through this research, users will be able to run software in which unneeded code is removed, thus decreasing the vulnerability of the programs they use.

Lee compares the project to a house. ā€œWhen you build a house, you only really need one door, but the house may still have multiple doors. The number of doors increases the opportunity to break in,ā€ Lee said. ā€œIf you only have one door, your house is more secure.ā€

In order to do this, the researchers are looking at the full stack of software systems, including applications, operating systems, and possibly Internet of Things devices. They are planning to use static and dynamic analysis techniques to determine which pathways through the system different users need. Each researcher has a specific area of expertise:

Pandeā€™s focus on compilers will help determine what essential code must be loaded for each user during application execution.

Overall, the five researchers have the set of complementary skills needed for the project to be successful. Over the five-year life of the grant, the researchers expect to develop a series of approaches for reducing attack surface that anyone can use on complex systems, as well on low-level code.

ā€œGoing back to the house metaphor, the problem is that different people want to use different doors,ā€ Orso says. ā€œOur research will allow users to customize the house for each person so that it contains only the door that person needs.ā€

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