ADVERSARIAL AND UNCERTAIN REASONING FOR ADAPTIVE CYBER DEFENSE: BUILDING THE SCIENTIFIC FOUNDATION

Date: 
Wednesday, April 1, 2020
Location: 
Online, video conference
Time: 
4:00PM - 6:00PM

Abstract: Today's cyber defenses are largely static. They are governed by slow deliberative processes involving testing, security patch deployment, and human-in-the-loop monitoring. As a result, adversaries can systematically probe target networks, pre-plan their attacks, and ultimately persist for long times inside compromised networks and hosts. A new class of technologies, called Adaptive Cyber Defense (ACD), is being developed that presents adversaries with optimally changing attack surfaces and system configurations, forcing adversaries to continually re-assess and re-plan their cyber operations. Although these approaches (e.g., moving target defense, dynamic diversity, and bio-inspired defense) are promising, they assume stationary and stochastic, but non-adversarial, environments. To realize the full potential, we need to build the scientific foundations so that system resiliency and robustness in adversarial settings can be rigorously defined, quantified, measured, and extrapolated in a rigorous and reliable manner.

Speaker: Prof. Sushil Jajodia

Affiliation: Center for Secure Information Systems - George Mason University

Registration: Participation if free. However, registration is required on Eventbrite at the following link:

"Adversarial and Uncertain Reasoning for Adaptive Cyber Defense: Building the Scientific Foundation

The presentation's video can be retrieved from here