Dr. Saxena is offering a brand new special topics course for graduate students, CSCE 689: Secure Authentication Systems, in Spring 2022. This is a research-centered course covering a wide variety of authentication techniques, and the strengths and pitfalls of these techniques. Student groups will be presenting research papers, and pursuing a practical project on a topic of their interest relevant to authentication, with the potential to convert these projects into research publications depending on their merit. No exams! Please consider enrolling for the course and learn about some cool research in one of the most important areas of cybersecurity — authentication breaks are often used as a stepping stone for many other devastating cyber attacks (e.g., the SolarWinds and Twitter hacks of 2020). For any questions, please free to reach out to Dr. Saxena: nsaxena@tamu.edu.
News
Two papers accepted to ACNS 2022
- Gummy Browsers: Targeted Browser Spoofing against State-of-the-Art Fingerprinting Techniques
Zengrui Liu, Prakash Shrestha and Nitesh Saxena
In International Conference on Applied Cryptography and Network Security (ACNS), June 2022. - Beware of Your Vibrating Devices! Vibrational Relay Attacks on Zero-Effort Deauthentication
Prakash Shrestha and Nitesh Saxena.
In International Conference on Applied Cryptography and Network Security (ACNS), June 2022.
Paper accepted to ACSAC 2021
- Evaluating the Effectiveness of Protection Jamming Devices in Mitigating Smart Speaker Eavesdropping Attacks Using Gaussian White Noise
Payton Walker and Nitesh Saxena
In Annual Computer Security Applications Conference (ACSAC), December 2021.
Paper accepted to MobiCom 2021
Face-Mic: Inferring Live Speech and Speaker Identity via Subtle Facial Dynamics Captured by AR/VR Motion Sensors
Cong Shi, Xiangyu Xu, Tianfang Zhang , Payton Walker, Yi Wu, Jian Liu, Nitesh Saxena, Yingying Chen and Jiadi Yu
In the 27th Annual International Conference on Mobile Computing and Networking (Mobicom), Jan/Feb 2022.
Mohammed Jubur passes PhD defense
Mohammed passed his PhD defense. Some cool studies on emerging authentication paradigms, including those at ACM TOPS’21, EuroS&P’21, ASIACCS’21, and more. He will continue his academic expedition as an Assistant Prof. at Jazan University, Saudi Arabia. Congratulations!
Mohammed is the 10th PhD graduate of the SPIES lab. Who are the next 10? 🙂
NSF CICI Grant Funded
Dr. Saxena has a new NSF CICI grant funded:
NSF Cybersecurity Innovation for Cyberinfrastructure (CICI), “UCSS: Towards Secure and Usable Push Notification Authentication for Collaborative Scientific Infrastructures”, $499,934, Aug 2021 – Aug 2024, Sole PI.
This project will allow us to study and redesign push notification based authentication.
2 papers accepted to WiSec 2021
- SoK: Assessing the Threat Potential of Vibration-based Attacks against Live Speech using Mobile Sensors
Payton Walker and Nitesh Saxena
In ACM Conference on Security and Privacy in Wireless and Mobile Networks (WiSec), Jun-Jul 2021.
[pdf] - Spearphone: A Lightweight Speech Privacy Exploit via Accelerometer-Sensed Reverberations from Smartphone Loudspeakers
Abhishek Anand, Chen Wang, Jian Liu, Nitesh Saxena and Yingying Chen
In ACM Conference on Security and Privacy in Wireless and Mobile Networks (WiSec), Jun-Jul 2021.
[pdf]
Mashari Alatawi passes his PhD qualifiers
Mashari Alatawi passed his PhD qualifiers with a literature review and systematization of end-to-end encryption systems, in particular focusing on the authentication ceremonies deployed by these systems.
Paper accepted to IEEE Security and Privacy
Authentication of Voice Commands on Voice Assistance Systems Leveraging Vibrations on Wearables
Cong Shi, Yan Wang, Yingying Chen, and Nitesh Saxena.
In IEEE Security and Privacy (Magazine), Special Issue of Selected Paper from ACSAC’20, 2021.
Shalini Saini passes her PhD qualifiers
Shalini Saini passed her PhD qualifiers with a unique survey on the impact of predatory science, in particular, on medical AI solutions.