CRCS Lunch Seminar
Date: Monday, November 29, 2010
Time: 11:30am – 1:-00pm
Place: Maxwell Dworkin 119
As a result of increasing spam, DDoS attacks, cybercrime,
and data exfiltration from corporate and government sites, there have
been multiple calls for an Internet architecture that enables better
network attribution at the packet layer. The intent is for a mechanism
that links a packet to some packet level personally identifiable
information. But cyberattacks and cyberexploitations are more different
than they are the same. One result of these distinctions is that
packet-level attribution is neither as useful nor as necessary as it
would appear. In this talk, I analyze the different types of
Internet-based attacks, and observe the role that currently available
alternatives to attribution already play in deterrence and prosecution.
I focus on the particular character of multi-stage network attacks, in
which machine A penetrates and “takes over” machine B, which then does
the same to machine C, etc. and consider how these types of attacks
might be traced, and observe that any technical contribution can only
be contemplated in the larger regulatory context of various legal
jurisdictions.
This represents joint work with David Clark of MIT.
Susan Landau is a fellow at the Radcliffe
Institute for Advanced Study for the 2010-2011 academic year. Her book,
“Surveillance or Security? The Risks Posed by New Wiretapping
Technologies,” will be published by MIT Press in March 2011. From
1999-2010 Landau was a Distinguished Engineer at Sun Microsystems;
there she concentrated on the interplay between security and public
policy. Landau has briefed government officials in both Washington and
Europe on such disparate issues as security risks in surveillance
mechanisms, digital rights management, and cryptographic export
control, and she has written numerous articles and op-eds on these
issues. Most recently she testified for the House Science Committee on
Cybersecurity Activities at NIST’s Information Technology Laboratory.
She and Whitfield Diffie wrote “Privacy on the Line: The Politics of
Wiretapping and Encryption.” Landau is a member of the Commission on
Cyber Security for the 44th Presidency, established by the Center for
Strategic and International Studies, and serves on the Computer Science
and Telecommunications Board of the National Research Council and on
the advisory committee for the National Science Foundation’s
Directorate for Computer and Information Science Engineering. Before
joining Sun, Landau was a faculty member at the University of
Massachusetts and Wesleyan University. Landau is the recipient of the
2008 Women of Vision Social Impact Award, a Fellow of the American
Association for the Advancement of Science, and an ACM Distinguished
Engineer.
Last updated November 22, 2010