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SUMMARY:Securing Next-generation Autonomous Cyber-physical Systems
DTSTART:20170302T141500
DTSTAMP:20260406T174749Z
UID:0a3c6861ae4397d65d4c91976b921a284302d2e23cfdf2f0aa44aa46
CATEGORIES:Conferences - Seminars
DESCRIPTION:Dr Aanjhan Ranganathan\, ETH Zürich\nAbstract\nThe future is 
 autonomous and cyber-physical systems will play a critical role in it. Wit
 h their imminent integration and deployment into safety- and security-crit
 ical applications such as transportation\, healthcare\, and energy\, it is
  important to ensure the resilience of these systems to attacks. Cyber-phy
 sical systems are a conglomeration of a variety of physical sensing\, comp
 uting and communication technologies. Therefore\, they are vulnerable to a
  wider range of attacks and security needs to become an integral part of t
 he system’s design. In other words\, there is a strong need to build sec
 ure sensing\, computing and communication technologies without compromisin
 g on their performance guarantees.\nIn this talk\, I will present my recen
 t works on securing modern-day autonomous cyber-physical systems. First\, 
 location and time are critical to a wide-variety of applications (e.g.\, a
 utonomous cars\, drones) and today's systems are vulnerable to location sp
 oofing attacks. I will introduce SPREE\, the first spoofing resilient GPS 
 receiver capable of limiting even the strongest of attackers known in the 
 literature. Second\, I will address the problem of guaranteeing timing pro
 perties in mixed-criticality systems in the scenario of partial hardware a
 nd software compromise. Third\, I will briefly demonstrate the practical l
 imits of isolation achievable on multi-core computing platforms which are 
 today increasingly used in building autonomous systems. Finally\, I will d
 iscuss open challenges and research opportunities that lie ahead enabling 
 a secure and safe autonomous cyber-physical future.\n \nBio:\nAanjhan is 
 currently a post-doctoral researcher in the System Security Group at ETH Z
 urich. He obtained his PhD in 2016 under the supervision of Prof. Dr. Srdj
 an Capkun. His doctoral dissertation was awarded the Outstanding Dissertat
 ion medal by ETH Zurich. He has worked on a broad set of system security t
 opics from embedded systems (e.g.\, automotive)\, computer architecture to
  wireless physical layer communication. Prior to joining the System Securi
 ty group at ETH Zurich\, he worked at Robert Bosch for over 3 years involv
 ed in research and development of electronic control modules for top autom
 otive manufacturers including Audi and Volkswagen.\n 
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STATUS:CONFIRMED
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