Spring 2015 CS 458/658 (Computer Security and Privacy) Syllabus

Instructors Ian McKillop Cecylia Bocovich
Office Phone x37127
Office Location DC 3530 DC 2102
Office Hours T, Th 10–11 am
or by appointment
T, W 1-2 pm
or by appointment
Email ian@uwaterloo.ca cbocovic@uwaterloo.ca

Lectures:

This syllabus is a guideline for the course and not a contract. As such, its terms may be altered when doing so is, in the opinion of the instructor, in the best interests of the class.

Required Text

Charles P. Pfleeger, Shari Lawrence Pfleeger, and Jonathon Margulies, Security in Computing, 5th edition, Prentice-Hall, 2015, ISBN 0-13-408507-4 http://www.informit.com/store/security-in-computing-9780134085043

The course textbook is also available in an online edition; a limited number of people from uWaterloo can be using the online edition at one time. If you are off-campus, you can use the library's proxy service to access the book's proxied URL.

Other Resources

Overview

This course provides an introduction to security and privacy issues in various aspects of computing, including programs, operating systems, networks, databases, and Internet applications. It examines causes of security and privacy breaches, and gives methods to help prevent them.

Students completing this course should be better able to produce programs that can defend against active attacks, and not just against random bugs.

Intended audience

Third or fourth year CS students (CS 458), or first year CS graduate students (CS 658)

Prerequisites

CS 350 (Operating Systems). Familiarity with C.

Outline

Introduction to Computer Security and Privacy (1.5 hours)
The meaning of computer security; comparing security with privacy; types of threats and attacks; methods of defense
Program Security (6 hours)
Secure programs; nonmalicious program errors; malicious code; controls against program threats
Operating System Security (6 hours)
Methods of protection; access control; user authentication
Network Security (4.5 hours)
Network threats; firewalls, intrusion detection systems
Internet Application Security and Privacy (9 hours)
Basics of cryptography; security and privacy for Internet applications (email, instant messaging, web browsing); privacy-enhancing technologies
Database Security and Privacy (4.5 hours)
Security and privacy requirements; reliability, integrity, and privacy; inference; data mining; k-anonymity
Non-technical Aspects (4.5 hours)
Administration of security systems; policies; physical security; economics of security; legal and ethical issues

It is expected that you will have read the appropriate sections of the textbook (as noted in the Modules section of LEARN) before class. Additional readings may be assigned as well, and will appear on the lecture slides page; those readings marked as mandatory contain required material for the course; those marked before class must be read before the date of the corresponding lecture.

Grading Policy

Grades will be calculated as follows:

If you do not pass the combined midterm and final mark, (0.15*midterm + 0.35*final)/0.5 < .50, you cannot pass the course.

Midterm exam time: Tue, June 9, 2015, 7:00-8:50 pm, Location TBD. There is no alternate midterm.

The midterm and final are closed-book exams. The midterm covers all material presented up to that point in the course. The final exam covers material from the whole term, with emphasis on the second half of the course. Midterms will be returned in class.

Assignments are due at 3:00 pm Eastern Time on their respective due dates. Late submissions for assignments (not including the blog task and the self-tests) will be accepted only up to 48 hours after the original due date. There is no penalty for accepted late submissions, and multiple assignments can be submitted late, including the last one. Course personnel will not give assistance for assignments after their original due dates. Due dates will be posted well in advance in the Assignments section of the LEARN course site. Assignment comments and marks will be returned by email to students' uwaterloo.ca email addresses.

Self-tests are meant to help you keep up with the material, and gauge your grasp of it (at a basic level) on an ongoing basis. The availability and deadline information will be posted on LEARN. You can attempt each self-test as often as you like during its availability period; your last grade on each self-test will be the one recorded (although course personnel can see every attempt). No late self-tests will be accepted for any reason, including being late to join the class.

It is your responsibility to keep up with all course-related information posted to LEARN.

Reappraisal Policy

If you have an assignment that you would like to have reappraised, please follow the instructions given on LEARN to submit your request. If you have an exam that you would like to have reappraised, please provide the course instructor with a written request on paper and your exam. In either case, include a justification for your claims. The appeals deadline is one week after the respective graded item is first made available. Note that for an exam the entire exam will be remarked, and the assigned grade may go up or down as a result.

Communication

Please direct all communication to the discussion forum in LEARN. For personal matters, a question that might reveal part of a solution, etc., also ask a question in LEARN, but make it visible only to instructors. This way your question can be read only by the course instructor. Please use regular email only as a last resort, and then it must be from your uwaterloo.ca email address.

Important course information will generally be posted to LEARN, but may also be sent to your uwaterloo.ca email address. It is your responsibility to monitor all of these channels.

Research Paper (CS 658)

Students registered in CS 658 must write a research survey paper on a topic related to computer security or privacy. Your topic must be approved in advance by the instructor. In writing your paper, you must become familiar with the research literature relevant to your topic. Your focus should be on academic venues, such as USENIX Security, ACM CCS, IEEE Symposium on Security and Privacy, or the NDSS Symposium. Your paper should be a summary of past and current work on your topic, as well as an overview of known open problems and potential future directions in the area. You should provide a concise summary of work, emphasizing major accomplishments, rather than a detailed accounting of individual pieces of research activity. Your paper should be formatted in the two-column ACM proceedings format, using one of the ACM SIG Proceedings Templates, and should not be longer than six pages. The ACM templates include headings for "Categories and Subject Descriptors," "General Terms," and "Keywords.", which you do not need to use. The research paper will account for 20% of your overall mark with the other 80% following the proportions of the CS 458 formula. You must submit a one-page proposal to the instructor by Feb 6. It is recommended but not required that you discuss the proposal with the instructor first. Additional milestones for the completion of the paper may be set. The final version is due on Apr 6.

Teaching Assistants

Security Information

In this course, you will be exposed to information about security problems and vulnerabilities with computing systems and networks. To be clear, you are not to use this or any other similar information to test the security of, break into, compromise, or otherwise attack, any system or network without the express consent of the owner. In particular, you will comply with all applicable laws and UW policies, including, but not limited to, the following:

Violations will be treated severely, and with zero tolerance.

Academic Integrity

Students are encouraged to talk to one another, to the TAs, to the instructor, or to anyone else about any of the assignments. Any assistance, though, must be limited to discussion of the problem and sketching general approaches to a solution. Each student must write his or her own solutions, including code and documentation if appropriate, for the assignments. Consulting another student's solution is prohibited, and submitted solutions may not be copied from any source. In particular, submitting assignments copied in whole or in part from assignment submissions to a previous offering of this course, or from any offering of any other course, is forbidden, even if a student is resubmitting his or her own work. These and any other forms of collaboration on assignments constitute cheating. If you have any questions about whether some activity constitutes cheating, please ask the instructor.

The general Faculty and University policy:

Note for Students with Disabilities

AccessAbility Services, located in Needles Hall, Room 1132, collaborates with all academic departments to arrange appropriate accommodations for students with disabilities without compromising the academic integrity of the curriculum. If you require academic accommodations to lessen the impact of your disability, please register with AccessAbility at the beginning of each academic term.