Malicious Software and Hardware in Internet of Things
May 11, 2021 - Virtual Conference
Workshop Program
18:40-19:00 Main Session (Chair: Francesco Regazzoni) |
On Resilience of Security-oriented Error Detecting Architectures Against Power Attacks: A Theoretical Analysis |
Osnat Keren and Ilia Polian |
A Threat Model Method for ICS Malware: the TRISIS case |
Yassine Mekdad, Giuseppe Bernieri, Mauro Conti, and Abdeslam El Fergougui |
Tapeout of a RISC-V Crypto Chip with Hardware Trojans: A Case-Study on Trojan Design and Pre-Silicon Detectability |
Alexander Hepp and Georg Sigl |
Fault Injection Attacks on SoftMax Function in Deep Neural Networks: Extended Abstract |
Dirmanto Jap, Yoo-Seung Won, and Shivam Bhasin |
19:00 - 19:45 Panel |
19:00-19:45 |
The ethic of things - The role of ethics in IoT security research |
Moderator: Paolo Palmieri (University College Cork) and Francesco Regazzoni (University of Amsterdam and Università della Svizzera italiana) |
Panelists: Prof. Samuel Pagliarini (TalTech), Dr. Georg T. Becker (DCSO), Prof. Cees De Laat (University of Amsterdam), Dr. Marc Witteman (Riscure) |
When thinking about ethics in security research the first thing that comes to mind is ethical hacking, whose principles and guidelines for the responsible disclosure of vulnerabilities in software have long been established. Is this still true when moving to IoT devices? How can responsible disclosure be done for hardware, which is much more important in these devices, but cannot be fixed with a simple patch? Furthermore, does ethics in security research mean only responsible disclosure or does it also imply awareness by researches of the need to design, in the first place, devices that have to handle user data in an ethical way?
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