Eight Georgia Tech researchers were honored with the ACM Distinguished Paper Award for their contributions to cybersecurity at the ACM Conference on Computer and Communications Security (CCS).

Engineers and computer scientists show how bad actors can exploit browser-based control systems in industrial facilities with easy-to-deploy, difficult-to-detect malware.

Attackers are tricking computer users with URLs that are similar to those of real companies.

Up to $125,000 in cash and prizes awaits students with cyber ideas for research or commercialization.

Interested in cybersecurity at Georgia Tech? Gain traction in this fast-growing field during Fall '17

Georgia Tech students will present their best cybersecurity research before a panel of venture capitalists and business leaders for a chance to win cash at the “Demo Day Finale” on April 13.

Analyzing network traffic going to suspicious domains could give security administrators earlier warning of malware infections.

Three Georgia Tech students head to the RSA® Conference as 'Security Scholars' to broaden their research.

Cybersecurity researchers have developed a new form of ransomware that was able to take over control of a simulated water treatment plant.

Ph.D. students conducting research on any cybersecurity research area such as policy, consumer-facing privacy, risk, trust, attribution, or cyber-physical systems are encouraged to apply for the IISP Cybersecurity Fellowship Program.

Researchers will begin a $100,000 project for Cisco to detect runtime errors using hardware-assisted signature generation.

In the realm of cybersecurity, white hats are good-guy defenders and black hats are the adversary. Yet it takes a combination of both to really put grey matter to work and solve the most vexing challenge of our time: protecting connected data.

ECE research faculty member Fariborz Farahmand received the Best Paper Award in the Big Data, Image Processing, and Multimedia Technology Track at the 2017 IEEE 8th Annual Ubiquitous Computing, Electronics, and Mobile Communications Conference.

ECE Professor Marilyn C. Wolf is the co-editor of the current special issue of the Proceedings of the IEEE, which is focused on safe and secure cyber-physical systems.

Tracer FIRE for the U.S. Department of Energy is a program developed by Sandia and Los Alamos National Laboratories to educate and train cyber security incident responders and analysts in critical skill areas.

On Sept. 6-7, 2018, Sandia National Laboratories and Georgia Tech ECE Assistant Professor Brendan Saltaformaggio hosted an exercise to provide students a look into how forensic incident response teams operate.

Georgia Tech ECE alumna Xiaojing Liao has been named as a runner-up for the 2018 ACM SIGSAC Doctoral Dissertation Award.

The School of Electrical and Computer Engineering (ECE) is pleased to welcome three new faculty members – Angelos Keromytis, Negar Kiyavash, and Shimeng Yu – to Georgia Tech.

New online master's in cybersecurity will cost less than $10,000.

Panagiotis (Panos) Kintis has been selected to participate as a DARPA Riser in D60, DARPA’s 60th anniversary symposium.

A conversation with the new executive director of the Online Master of Science in Cybersecurity

A control system simulator for a chemical processing plant could help train operators on security measures.

Cybersecurity researchers have helped close a side channel security vulnerability in popular encryption software.

Celine Irvene and Jenna McGrath were named IISP Cybersecurity Fellows for Spring '18.

Five, new cybersecurity discoveries by researchers at Georgia Tech and its partners are unveiled at a premier international event.

This robot is designed to lure in digital troublemakers who have set their sights on industrial facilities. HoneyBot will then trick the bad actors into giving up valuable information to cybersecurity professionals.

Researchers are creating a connected new world through the internet of things.

Accenture announced as first corporate donor for OMS Cybersecurity and invests $500,000 to help close cybersecurity knowledge gap.

A study of 20 major cloud hosting services has found that as many as 10 percent of the repositories hosted by them had been compromised.

A $1.5 million gift from Intel establishes a new research center dedicated to machine-learning cybersecurity -- the analytics behind malware detection and threat analysis.

Georgia Tech has been awarded $17.3 million to help establish new science of attribution.

Looking to share its advanced research on bot behavior, emerging infections and mitigation, Georgia Tech is the first academic institution to join the cybersecurity trade association's anti-abuse working group.

Associate Director Michael Farrell provides a public statement on behalf of the Institute for Information Security & Privacy.

Information security students will compete before a national panel of venture capitalists for cash in the inaugural “Demo Day Finale” on April 13.

Researchers have developed a new technique for identifying promotional infections of websites operated by government and educational organizations.

The Institute for Information Security & Privacy invites students of any major, any year to bring cybersecurity research ideas to Fall ’16 Demo Day.

The Institute for Information Security & Privacy at Georgia Tech announced a $5-million scholarship fund and the creation of a new Ph.D. fellowship program dedicated to emerging cybersecurity ideas.

The search for the new GTRI Deputy Director for Research for the Information and Cyber Sciences Directorate (ICSD) is complete, and on April 18, William H. Robinson, Ph.D., will assume the role.

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