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SUMMARY:SCION: Scalability\, Control\, and Isolation On Next-Generation Ne
 tworks  - Prof. Adrian Perrig\, Department of Computer Science at the Swis
 s Federal Institute of Technology (ETH)
DTSTART:20131118T140000Z
DTEND:20131118T150000Z
UID:TALK48354@talks.cam.ac.uk
CONTACT:Laurent Simon
DESCRIPTION:*Abstract:*\nWe present the first Internet architecture design
 ed to provide route\ncontrol\, failure isolation\, and explicit trust info
 rmation for\nend-to-end communications. SCION separates ASes into groups o
 f\nindependent routing sub-planes\, called trust domains\, which then\nint
 erconnect to form complete routes. Trust domains provide natural\nisolatio
 n of routing failures and human misconfiguration\, give\nendpoints strong 
 control for both inbound and outbound traffic\,\nprovide meaningful and en
 forceable trust\, and enable scalable routing\nupdates with high path fres
 hness. As a result\, our architecture\nprovides strong resilience and secu
 rity properties as an intrinsic\nconsequence of good design principles\, a
 voiding piecemeal add-on\nprotocols as security patches. Meanwhile\, SCION
  only assumes that a\nfew top-tier ISPs in the trust domain are trusted fo
 r providing\nreliable end-to-end communications\, thus achieving a small T
 rusted\nComputing Base. Both our security analysis and evaluation results\
 nshow that SCION naturally prevents numerous attacks and provides a\nhigh 
 level of resilience\, scalability\, control\, and isolation. \n\n*Bio:*\nA
 drian Perrig is a Professor of Computer Science at the Department of\nComp
 uter Science at the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology (ETH) in\nZüric
 h\, where he leads the network security group. From 2002 to 2012\,\nhe was
  a Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering\, Engineering\nand Pub
 lic Policy\, and Computer Science (courtesy) at Carnegie Mellon\nUniversit
 y. He served as the technical director for Carnegie Mellon's\nCybersecurit
 y Laboratory (CyLab). He earned his Ph.D. degree in\nComputer Science from
  Carnegie Mellon University under the guidance of\nJ. D. Tygar\, and spent
  three years during his Ph.D. degree at the\nUniversity of California at B
 erkeley. He received his B.Sc. degree in\nComputer Engineering from the Sw
 iss Federal Institute of Technology in\nLausanne (EPFL). Adrian's research
  revolves around building secure\nsystems -- in particular security of fut
 ure Internet architectures. 
LOCATION:Lecture Theatre 2\, Computer Laboratory\, William Gates Building
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