cybersecurity Archives | 166su News Central Florida Research, Arts, Technology, Student Life and College News, Stories and More Fri, 29 May 2026 15:50:45 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 /wp-content/blogs.dir/20/files/2019/05/cropped-logo-150x150.png cybersecurity Archives | 166su News 32 32 Yan Solihin Named Senior Member of National Academy of Inventors /news/yan-solihin-named-senior-member-of-national-academy-of-inventors/ Fri, 29 May 2026 15:50:45 +0000 /news/?p=153436 The Pegasus Professor is one of 230 emerging inventors who have been selected for this honor.

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166su researcher and cybersecurity expert Yan Solihin has been named a senior member of the National Academy of Inventors (NAI), an honor that recognizes innovators whose work has made a tangible impact beyond the laboratory.

Globally, a total of 230 emerging inventors were named to the list this year, making it the largest cohort in NAI history. The inductees will be honored during the NAI 15th annual conference in Los Angeles in June. Solihin says he feels honored to join this distinguished group of researchers.

“What sets the NAI senior member designation apart is that it focuses on innovations with real-world impact.”

“This induction means a lot to me,” he says. “What sets the NAI senior member designation apart is that it focuses on innovations with real-world impact.”

Solihin’s work has significantly impacted society and the way that our technology works. The Pegasus Professor and director of the 166su Cyber Security and Privacy faculty cluster initiative has made computing systems faster, more reliable and more secure.

Among his most influential inventios are a security mechanism known as the Bonsai Merkle Tree and a system called Cache Quality of Service. The former protects computer memory from unauthorized modifications at significantly lower cost than previous methods, while the latter addresses performance slowdowns that occur when multiple applications share processor resources.

Both innovations have influenced processors that are now widely used in data centers.

“My journey of making real-world impact from my research spanned many years ago, starting in 2012,” he says. “Since that time, my work has garnered 57 U.S. patents in the area of chip design.”

Solihin, who is also an Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, Association for Computing Machinery and Japan Society for Promotion of Science fellow, says his process for taking an invention from an idea to a tangible product starts with identifying a problem that is worth solving. From there, he analyzes literature and technical documents for solutions, identifies the key technical challenges to overcome and then works to refine the solution. He encourages young inventors to just start by “brainspilling,” or getting the idea out on paper.

“When I have an idea in my head, it is typically not very clear,” Solihin says. “It appears vague, like seeing it through fog. Translating this into an invention requires working the brain to conceptualize the solution, to visualize it in much deeper details, to enumerate all the cases in which it shows benefits and drawbacks and solves key technical challenges. This process, brainspilling, requires long hours with pencil and paper to remove the fog.”

Ultimately, he says, the motivation to continue innovating comes from the satisfaction of solving complex problems.

“It’s the good feeling of gaining clarity on something that was once unclear,” he says. “It’s similar to solving a puzzle but with open-ended problems and unpredictable timelines.”

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166su Collegiate Cybersecurity Competition Team Advances to Nationals After Outstanding Regional Win /news/ucf-collegiate-cybersecurity-competition-team-advances-to-nationals-after-outstanding-regional-win/ Fri, 10 Apr 2026 15:10:13 +0000 /news/?p=152229 166su’s first-place finish at the 2026 Southeast Collegiate Cyber Defense Competition marks its ninth since 2013.

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Under a high-stakes, simulated cyberattack and mounting pressure, the 166su Collegiate Cybersecurity Competition (C3) team proved it can defend, adapt and outperform — earning first place at the 2026 Southeast Collegiate Cyber Defense Competition (CCDC).

The team rose above nine competitors, including Tennessee Tech University, Clemson University, the University of South Florida and the University of Florida. With the win, UCF advances to the National Collegiate Cyber Defense Competition, which will be held virtually next month.

Twelve students make up this year’s C3 team: sophomore information technology (IT) majors Gabriel Edwards and Maksim Shostak; junior IT majors Logan Autry, Anthony Donnelly, Joseph Durand, Adam Raczynski and Jonathan Styles; senior IT major Ardian Peach; sophomore computer science major Tyler Waddell; junior computer science major Benjamin Williams; cyber security and privacy master’s student Andy Pompura ’23; and senior prelaw major Noah Magill, who serves as team captain.

166su’s Legacy of Cybersecurity Success

Their stellar performance marks 166su’s ninth first-place finish at the Southeast CCDC regional since 2013. 166su earned runner-up finishes in 2017 and 2025, along with first-place titles in special at-large CCDC regionals during the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020 and 2021.

“166su has historically maintained high service availability levels while under attack by the red team.” — Tom Nedorost ’02MS, senior instructor and C3 team coach

The team not only clinched the top spot but also swept all three categories, winning Best in Uptime Service, Best in Business and Best in Defense.

“166su has historically maintained high service availability levels while under attack by the red team,” says Tom Nedorost ’02MS, C3 team coach and senior instructor of computer science and IT. “We lived up to that expectation again this year, which resulted in winning the Best in Uptime Service award.”

 

Nedorost adds that the team strengthened its ability to complete technical service requests while hardening systems against vulnerabilities to protect their network, key improvements that led to the two additional category wins.

Putting Cyber Defense Skills into Practice

At each competition, teams are tasked with defending a fictional company’s network against cyberattacks launched by red team members attempting to infiltrate it. All the while, competitors must maintain business operations and respond to customer service requests.

Each obstacle mimics real-world scenarios cybersecurity professionals face, allowing competitors to demonstrate their technical skills, business acumen and ability to collaborate.

It’s fun to go up against people [who, collectively,] would be a force to reckon with in the cyber world .” — Noah Magill, prelaw major and C3 team captain

Magill says the Southeast CCDC is among the most competitive, with red team members from leading companies such as Amazon Web Services and Cisco.

“All of them put together make up one of the scariest real-world life adversaries,” Magill says. “It’s fun to go up against people [who, collectively,] would be a force to reckon with in the cyber world — and a lot of [them] are [166su] alumni.”

Next Up: Nationals

As the team sets its sights on the national competition, the work is far from over. Magill says a few more 100-hour weeks are likely ahead.

“Everyone on the team is incredibly adept at what they do and world-class [in] their specialty,” Magill says. “Leading this team [and relying] on such amazing teammates with such a diverse amount of skills has been really awesome.”

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166su Computer Science Professor Named Fellow of Preeminent Computing Organization /news/ucf-computer-science-professor-named-fellow-of-preeminent-computing-organization/ Tue, 24 Feb 2026 15:00:07 +0000 /news/?p=151032 Yan Solihin, director of 166su’s Cyber Security and Privacy Cluster, has been named a fellow of the Association for Computing Machinery for his pioneering work in computer architecture.

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After decades of pushing the boundaries of how computers think, Pegasus Professor Yan Solihin of the has earned the highest professional distinction in computer architecture.

The Association for Computing Machinery (ACM) has named Solihin to its 2025 class of fellows — a distinction awarded to just 71 professionals worldwide for their remarkable achievements, technical innovations and lasting contributions to the field.

Selected from ACM’s 100,000 members, the new fellows will be formally inducted at the ACM Awards Banquet in June.

For Solihin, the recognition represents something deeper than a title.

“Being one out of 71 selected for this designation worldwide in 2025, I feel deeply honored,” he says. “This recognition is the culmination of decades of research in computer architecture, with contributions from my former and current Ph.D. students and collaborators.”

A Pioneer in Computer Architecture

Long before today’s cloud-powered, security-conscious computing era, Solihin was asking questions others weren’t.

In the early 2000s, as research focused on single-core processors, he turned his attention to multicore systems and uncovered a hidden flaw. His research group identified a critical performance challenge in shared cache architecture: uneven slowdowns caused by cache sharing. When multiple programs run simultaneously and share a common cache, some slow down more than others due to resource limitations.

“I feel deeply humbled because, at the time I chose to work on these problems, it was not clear how important they would turn out to be.”

Groundbreaking when it emerged in 2003, this phenomenon is now widely known and studied by computer scientists. Solihin and his group coined the term “fair cache sharing” and introduced a technique to partition the cache so programs slow down equally, ultimately improving overall performance. They also coined the term “cache quality of service,” advocating for cache policies that enable differentiated performance levels. Solihin also pioneered research on secure processors, which allow applications to run in an environment protected from vulnerabilities in system software.

Today, those once-theoretical ideas are foundational. Cache partitioning and secure processors are now standard features in graphics processing units and central processing units, particularly those powering cloud computing systems worldwide.

“I feel deeply humbled because, at the time I chose to work on these problems, it was not clear how important they would turn out to be,” Solihin says. “I started working on … cache partitioning when the hot research topics of the day were single-core processors. I started working in secure execution environment design when it was still unclear if hardware architecture should play a major role in computer security.”

Making an Impact in Industry and Education

After earning his doctorate in computer science from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Solihin worked as a professor at North Carolina State University. He then joined the U.S. National Science Foundation, where he served as a program director for secure and trustworthy research on cyberspace and computer systems.

When he joined 166su in 2018, that bold ambition and pioneering spirit came with him.

As director of the at 166su, Solihin helped expand the university’s research footprint and developed the Cyber Security and Privacy master’s program within the Department of Computer Science. Under his leadership, the program has grown to 200 students, the research cluster has added 13 faculty members and his findings have been incorporated into the computer processing industry’s design and development of computer architecture.

Yet Solihin doesn’t claim any of these achievements as his greatest.

“The achievement I am the proudest of is the positive impact I have made on students that I have advised,” he says. “Some of my past students have established good careers of their own, including becoming professors at Oxford University, Northeastern University, UC Santa Cruz and Binghamton University.”

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166su Alums Are Twin Pillars of Support for 166su Cybersecurity Competition Teams /news/ucf-alums-are-twin-pillars-of-support-for-ucf-cybersecurity-competition-teams/ Thu, 05 Feb 2026 15:00:14 +0000 /news/?p=150743 What started as competition has become a lifelong commitment as Martin ’20 ’22MS and Michael Roberts ’19 ’21MS help shape what’s next for Hack@166su.

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They learned to defend networks under pressure — then took that mindset into the real world. 166su alumni Martin ’20 ’22MS and Michael Roberts ’19 ’21MS are two of the university’s most celebrated cybersecurity competitors. Now, even with their student days behind them, the identical twins remain deeply embedded in , proudly supporting, training and mentoring future cybersecurity talent.

From Cyber Competition to Real-World Defense

Both brothers turned their meaningful time at 166su into high-impact careers protecting critical systems. Martin leads the security engineering program at workforce management company Fountain, while Michael oversees cybersecurity efforts at Abbott Diabetes Care.

“I stayed interested in cybersecurity because it was also about safeguarding people, privacy and trust,” Michael says. “That sense of purpose in protecting people is what has kept me motivated. I am now responsible for protecting medical devices, some of the technology people most rely on in their everyday lives.”

Where Purpose Took Shape

That purpose was developed at 166su, where the Roberts brothers solidified their career paths through the renowned Collegiate Cyber Defense Club — better known as Hack@166su. The student-led organization became a launchpad, sharpening their technical skills through high-stakes competitions and invaluable collaboration. As Hack@166su stacked up championship after championship, university and industry partners doubled down on their support. In 2019, Lockheed Martin helped establish the Innovation Cyber Lab — a 970-square-foot dedicated practice space located in the Engineering I building — providing the team with a home base.

“These competitions helped me advance my skillset, gain real-world experience and make connections across the industry.” — Martin Roberts ’20 ’22MS

“166su gave us the space to experiment, to fail and to grow. The university’s investment in cybersecurity infrastructure and student-led initiatives made it possible for us to compete — and win — on a national level,” Michael says. “Not every university is willing to dedicate space and resources for a team to compete, so I am grateful to 166su for doing so.”

The brothers also lauded computer science instructor Tom Nedorost ’02MS, Hack@166su’s faculty advisor and a longtime collegiate cybersecurity competition (C3) coach, for his contributions to the programs. Nedorost was there from the beginning, when students officially formed the club in Spring 2013.

“166su participating in these competitions is only possible because of the dedication from our team’s faculty advisor, Dr. Nedorost,” Martin says. “These competitions helped me advance my skillset, gain real-world experience and make connections across the industry.”

Building Team-Ready Talent

Today, Michael’s role at Abbott includes recruiting, and he’s actively bringing fellow Knights with him. He has hired several Hack@166su alumni and says they possess a rare combination of technical depth and operational maturity, and that they share a strong bond from defending networks together in competitions.

“They’ve been battle-tested in competitions, but they also know how to work in teams, communicate risk and adapt quickly,” Michael says. “They know how to follow a playbook and how to innovate when a playbook doesn’t work. It’s difficult to teach that initiative and resourcefulness, so we look to hire those who already have it.”

Giving Back to What Gave Them a Start

Both brothers remain actively involved at 166su and are passionate about giving back as alumni.

“It’s important to stay involved in this way, and I recommend this to more alumni,” Martin says. “I’m only where I’m at today because of technical mentors who took the time to help train me up at the high school and the collegiate level.”

Martin emphasizes that success in cybersecurity goes far beyond the classroom. Experiences like competing on cybersecurity teams are essential for any student pursuing the field. He encourages students to cultivate interests outside of the classroom and to pursue multiple internships to gain more hands-on experience.

“The students that excel are the ones that dedicate the most time to bettering themselves and the people around them,” Martin says. “Those are the kinds of students who make it on the C3 team and excel in their careers after they graduate. So if you’re a student reading this with cybersecurity as an interest, find a niche and become really good at it.”

“I will continue to give back to the program and help it improve, and I hope more alumni do the same.” — Michael Roberts ’19 ’21MS

While Hack@166su’s trophy case already tells an impressive story, Michael says the best is yet to come — and he and his brother plan to be there every step of the way.

“Our best days of C3 aren’t behind us; they are in front of us,” Michael says. “And I talk about myself as part of C3 in the present tense because it is still a part of who I am, and I intend for it always to be. I will continue to give back to the program and help it improve, and I hope more alumni do the same. I am excited about the future of the program, and proud to be a part of it.”

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166su Students Host Live Cyberattack Simulation Contest /news/ucf-students-host-live-cyberattack-simulation-contest/ Tue, 22 Oct 2024 18:07:31 +0000 /news/?p=143556 Horse Plinko, created by Hack@166su and the 166su Collegiate Cybersecurity Competition Team, gives students the opportunity to defend a fictional company against an active cyberattack.

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166su students have introduced a new way for future cyber professionals to develop the hands-on cyber skills they’ll need in their careers. Horse Plinko, a live cyberattack-simulation contest named after a meme of a horse falling through a plinko board, has exploded in popularity since its introduction last year.

Organizers hosted its second Horse Plinko Cyber Competition this month, attracting more than 160 competitors.

The contest with the silly name offers serious experience for anyone interested in cyber defense. Participants role-play as cybersecurity interns who defend a fictional company, the International Horse Plinko League, from various cyberattacks. During the six-hour competition, “plinkterns” are tasked with three priorities: identifying threats, bolstering defenses to keep the threats from returning, and keeping the company’s critical services up and running in real time.

Group photo of the 88 competitors who competed in Saturday’s Horse Plinko
Group photo of the 88 competitors who competed in Saturday’s Horse Plinko.

“We simulate a business network for teams to defend and pit them against live attackers attempting, and succeeding, to hack into their network,” says competition director Harrison Keating ’24, a cybersecurity and privacy master’s degree student and captain of 166su’s Collegiate Cybersecurity Competition (C3) team. “That’s an experience many of them will not get again until they are working in the field.”

One of the big draws to Horse Plinko is the levity its organizers have weaved into the event. The contest underscores the valuable hands-on experience it offers with a healthy dose of fun.

“We have a LinkedIn profile and website for the fictional company, there’s recurring characters that appear in-person during the competition, and there are a lot of running jokes,” Keating says. “Keeping it light-hearted helps make the competition more approachable to new students.”

He adds that Horse Plinko is structured to mimic a real-world environment not just in terms of the technical skills required of future cyber professionals, but for the interpersonal skills needed as well.

“Cybersecurity is a highly collaborative field, and this is a good chance for them to develop their teamwork and communication skills in a high-pressure environment,” Keating says. “It also helps students network with their peers and learn from each other.”

With several dozen competitions under their belts — including a recent National College Cyber Defense Competition (NCCDC) championship — organizers have a wealth of experience to draw upon to develop and run the event. They intend to bring cyber skills to the masses with a contest designed to be accessible to anyone with an interest in cyber, no matter the major or skill level.

A group of students posing for a photo
A team of competitors and Hack@166su executive members who placed third Saturday: front row from left to right: Ayla Bratton, Kenny Nguyen, Jacob Salmon, Tabur Salmon. Back row from left to right: Adit Rajkumar, John Vezzola, Jonathan Styles and Kevin Kiderchah.

“Our club has over 350 members, and only eight of them get to compete in the National CCDC,” says Keating. “Our mission is to provide that kind of quality learning experience to as many students as possible.”

Keating says live contests like these aren’t widely available to students because of the infrastructure and manpower required to run them. Horse Plinko, however, is supported by hundreds of members from the C3 team and Hack@166su. Previous Horse Plinko competitors returned to help run the next event, bringing their ideas and experience to a new batch of plinkterns.

“It enables us to design from the perspective of a beginner and tailor the experience to where they’re at in their learning journey,” Keating says.

First-time competitor Muhammad Ali, a freshman computer science major, was completely new to cyber competitions. He shunned “blue team” or cyber defense activities, preferring to work on “red team” or cyberattack skills. Despite an obvious interest and acumen in cybersecurity — he says he hacked into his dad’s computer at the age of 9 — he says he didn’t think he had the skills to participate.

That all changed after his first experience with Horse Plinko.

“It’s a different story when you’re tasked against a whole squad of live red team hackers trying everything to take your services down,” Ali says. “It’s a lot of fun.”

He and his team placed second at the competition. In addition, he’s now scheduled to compete at two out-of-state cyber competitions next month.

“I suffer from imposter syndrome where I feel as if I’m not actually good enough for cybersecurity,” says Ali. “Surprisingly a lot of people do. 166su has a great community that has instilled not just self-confidence but acceptance for myself.”

Ali adds that he has every intention of participating in Horse Plinko again as an attacker on the red team.

“I never thought I’d enjoy Horse Plinko this much,” he says. “I am 100% doing this again next year. If you’re afraid of ‘blue teaming’, or [are] new to cybersecurity, Horse Plinko is the best place to get first-hand experience.”

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Hack@166su – Horse Plinko Group photo of the 88 competitors who competed in Saturday’s Horse Plinko. Hack@166su – Horse Plinko A team of competitors and Hack@166su executive members who placed third Saturday: front row from left to right: Ayla Bratton, Kenny Nguyen, Jacob Salmon, Tabur Salmon. Back row from left to right: Adit Rajkumar, John Vezzola, Jonathan Styles and Kevin Kiderchah
2 Promising 166su Researchers Earn 2024 NSF CAREER Awards /news/two-promising-ucf-researchers-earn-2024-nsf-career-awards/ Mon, 20 May 2024 14:29:08 +0000 /news/?p=141535 Early-career professors Fan Yao and Li Fang are receiving significant research funding to continue catalyzing their work as part of an annual NSF grant program.

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166su assistant professors Li Fang and Fan Yao have been named 2024 U.S. National Science Foundation (NSF) Faculty Early Career Development program (CAREER) award winners. The recipients were awarded funding through five years for their submitted projects.

Fang, who is an assistant professor in within the College of Sciences, is using the CAREER award to study the precise movement of electrons induced by light and to help educate others in her field.

Yao is an assistant professor in within the College of Engineering and Computer Science and a member of the Cyber Security and Privacy faculty cluster. He’ll use his CAREER award to identify lapses in computer processing security at the micro level and find ways to defend against them.

The annual award supports an estimated 500 early-career STEM faculty from either institutes of higher education or academic nonprofit organizations who have the potential to serve as academic role models in research and education and to lead advances in the mission of their department or organization.

Through their NSF CAREER awards, both Fang and Yao are continuing to build upon their research and contribute to key components of their respective fields.

Capturing Energy in a Fraction of a Second

Li Fang
Department of Physics
Title: Photo-induced Ultrafast Electron-nuclear Dynamics in Molecules
Award: $813,981 over five years

Li Fang is examining some of the smallest components of matter in some of the shortest amounts of time.

She studies how electrons move after their initial absorption of photo-energy as they attempt to interact, break or form a bond with other molecular components. The purpose of examining these molecular dynamics is crucial in better understanding physics and energy, Fang says.

“The dynamics of these charged particles will provide fundamental knowledge about energy absorption, dissipation and rearrangement in building blocks of materials and therefore is relevant to energy storage and harvest,” Fang says. “We implement spectroscopic tools to track the extremely fast motion of these charges. An electron’s motion is the first step in all chemical and photo reactions and ions are the subjects of chemical bonds that exist basically in all materials.”

Fang measures these movements in attoseconds and femtoseconds, which are one billion billionths of a second and one million billionths of a second, respectively.

Attoseconds are the natural time scale for electrons moving inside an atom while femtoseconds are the natural time scale for measuring nuclei moving within a molecule.

Fang’s NSF CAREER project will help her further uncover and measure how light can instigate changes at the molecular level and then share her research with the greater scientific community.

“The goal is to understand the ultrafast electron motion induced by intense laser beams and its correlation with the motion of the nuclei in a molecule,” she says. “An equally important part of my NSF CAREER award is the educational subproject, the goal of which is to introduce my research field ‘ultrafast science’ to a broader audience through media and local events.”

Fang came to 166su in 2020 from the Ohio State University.

Since arriving, she has garnered significant funding and support for her projects. In 2020, Fang was one of 76 recipients – and the only recipient from Florida – to be awarded an early career research program grant from the U.S. Department of Energy.

She also was instrumental in securing NSF funding of nearly $2 million for a powerful laser in 2021, aiming to build a user facility at 166su to continue studying electrons and molecular bonds using precise measurements in attoseconds.

Fang says it was extremely gratifying to earn her NSF CAREER award, and it represents a culmination of her previous scientific endeavors.

“It definitely fit into my career and will help me fulfill my goals as a researcher and an educator,” she says.

Fang is thankful for the assistance of her peers and collaborators in cultivating her studies and developing her NSF CAREER proposal.

“The NSF CAREER program at 166su organized by Saiful Khondaker is very helpful with improving the writing of the educational subproject, which is crucial to the NSF CAREER project,” she says.

166su has provided Fang with the opportunity to excel in her research, and she anticipates many more impactful discoveries to come.

“I am looking forward to carrying out real scientific experiments and discovering new findings with the state-of-the-art lasers and the spectroscopy systems we have,” Fang says. “Getting a prestigious CAREER award is just the start.”

Fan Yao
Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering
Title: Understanding and Ensuring Secure-by-design Microarchitecture in Modern Era of Computing
Award: $556,875

Effective computer system security requires searching high and low within its infrastructure to address vulnerabilities that could be overlooked and exploited.

Fan Yao has dedicated his research to thoroughly poring through potential weaknesses within the architectural and microarchitectural designs of computing and memory units to see how they can be safeguarded against malicious hacks and data breaches.

“In today’s interconnected digital landscape, we depend on computing devices to store and process our sensitive and personal data,” he says. “Given that hardware forms the foundational bedrock of all computing systems, its security is paramount. A computer with compromised hardware security is akin to a skyscraper built on shaky ground.”

Specifically, Yao is using his NSF CAREER project to examine computer processors and analyze side channel leakage, which is compromised access to information or infrastructure through indirect means.

“Through the automation of microarchitectural security analysis, we aim to uncover hidden hardware-level states prone to leakage, as well as to develop software-level patterns that can exploit these vulnerabilities to quantify their leakage potential,” he says. “Subsequently, the project will focus on designing robust defense strategies to prevent microarchitectural information leakage, thereby ensuring stronger protection for future generations of processors.”

The awarded funds will continue to catalyze Yao’s research and allow him to further challenge the limits of computer security. He is hopeful that the results will serve as an educational cornerstone to both aspiring students and his peers, he says.

“This grant allows us to explore innovative security solutions more deeply and to train the next generation of researchers in this critical field,” Yao says.  “This award fits perfectly into my career goals, as it enables me to establish a sustainable research program that can make meaningful contributions to both academia and industry.”

Yao arrived at 166su in the fall of 2018 after receiving his doctoral degree in computer engineering from the George Washington University.

The support and mentorship from 166su’s academic community and administration at 166su has been crucial to helping him achieve his research aspirations, he says.

“166su has been extremely supportive in junior faculty career development,” Yao says. “Many of the preliminary results for this project were achieved through experiments facilitated by this support. I am also profoundly grateful for the comprehensive assistance received during the development of this proposal. This includes invaluable guidance from the 166su CAREER mentoring program and the insightful feedback on my proposal provided by senior faculty members in our department.”

Yao is proud to have been awarded an NSF CAREER grant, and says he is excited to further his research.

“Receiving the NSF CAREER grant is an incredible honor and a pivotal moment in my career,” he says. “It not only validates the importance and potential impact of our work on microarchitecture security, but also provides a substantial platform to expand our research efforts.”

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Cybersecurity Dynasty: 166su Wins Sixth ‘Super Bowl’ of Collegiate Cyber Defense Competitions /news/cyber-security-dynasty-ucf-wins-sixth-super-bowl-of-collegiate-cyber-defense-competitions/ Tue, 30 Apr 2024 20:58:53 +0000 /news/?p=141298 When corporations and government agencies want to hire the nation’s best cybersecurity talent, they recruit at 166su.

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The Collegiate Cyber Defense Team at 166su, part of Hack@166su, won their record sixth national championship last weekend, defeating nine other regional champions to win the 2024 National Collegiate Cyber Defense Competition (NCCDC). The team returned home with the Alamo Cup trophy in the event presented by the Center for Infrastructure Assurance and Security at The University of Texas at San Antonio (UTSA).

More than 2,100 competitors from 198 schools participated in events across the country during NCCDC regional events, with the top 10 teams advancing to the national championship.

As one of the nation’s largest collegiate competitions of its kind, this year’s NCCDC tasked competitors with the scenario of managing, operating and defending the network infrastructure of a human resource outsourcing firm while responding to business tasks, customers, and fending off a group of live Red Team hackers.

“With our successful track record in the National CCDC and other cyber competitions over the years, it’s an undeniable fact that 166su has the best cyber program, best students, and best coaches in the nation,” said Professor Tom Nedorost, head coach of the team.

The competition’s unique focus on operational aspects of managing and protecting a network infrastructure is designed to assess each student’s depth of understanding and operational competency. The NCCDC is more than just a competitive environment though, as hundreds of volunteers work closely with participating competitors throughout the year to help develop their professional networks and provide mentorship.

Through these competitions, students gain skills and real-world experiences that make them highly attractive to potential employers.

It was this specific competition that led Harrison Keating to 166su. As a high school student in St. Augustine, Florida, he enjoyed building websites and began looking at the competitions held at the college level. When he realized that 166su had a track record of winning them, he made sure that his campus visit to 166su included a stop at the Hack@166su cybersecurity club. He enrolled, and landed a spot as an alternate on the team that he now leads as captain.

“The NCCDC is a two-day event,” Keating said. “At the beginning of day two, we were in third in one category and didn’t place in the other three. At that point, victory didn’t seem to be a possibility, Morale was low, but the team did an amazing job to find the silver lining, persevere and figuring out a way to improve in day two. Going from that position to national champions in a day was an incredible testament to the team’s determination.”

Keating and several of the team members will graduate this week in commencement ceremonies at 166su.

“The scenario we developed for this elite group of students is very realistic,” said Dwayne Williams, Director of the NCCDC and associate director at the CIAS. “The primary challenge this year is securing large amounts of personally identifiable information across different industries and states, but also dealing with a company acquisition while being targeted by bad actors. These unique challenges and hands-on experiences help each of these teams prepare for the real-world scenarios they will face after graduation.”

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At 166su, Cybersecurity Is a Team Sport /news/at-ucf-cybersecurity-is-a-team-sport/ Mon, 29 Apr 2024 13:23:06 +0000 /news/?p=141201 The internationally recognized student organization — which won first place at the National Collegiate Cyber Defense Competition this weekend — puts a spotlight on the hacking industry.

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Some kids love video games; others are intrigued by how they work. As a 13-year-old, Noah Magill enjoyed breaking into them. The pleasure derived from hacking computers followed the digital rabble-rouser throughout high school and into his search for a college.

“I looked over all the big-name universities and saw that they didn’t have a good cybersecurity offering or any clubs for their undergraduates,” says Magill, now a 20-year-old honors information technology student and Burnett Honors Scholar. “Then I reached out to 166su and learned about one of the biggest and best cybersecurity clubs and collegiate teams in all the United States. That was the selling point for me.”

Thanks to Magill and 406 of his classmates who are current members, the Collegiate Cyber Defense Club at 166su has been sending teams of students around the world to cash in on tournaments at the expense of some of the leading universities in the United States. The latest list of first-place honors for Hack@166su — as it is more informally known — includes the 2024 National Collegiate Cyber Defense Competition, 2024 Information Security Talent Search (ISTS) competition hosted by Rochester Institute of Technology; the National Centers for Academic Excellence (NCAE) Cyber Games Southeast Regional, in Tampa; the CAE Virtual Internship and Varied Innovative Demonstrations (VIVID) competition qualifier; and the Southeast Collegiate Cyber Defense Competition (SECCDC).

In all, UCF cybersecurity teams have earned 87 first place awards — including five NCCDC titles — 29 second-place and 25 third-place awards. The competitions, which allow 166su students to sharpen and display their skills before cybersecurity professionals, are hosted by companies from private industry, such as Cyberbit, Google, IBM, Lockheed Martin, Microsoft, Raymond James, and Raytheon and federal agencies, including the National Institute of Standards and Technology, Homeland Security, U.S. Department of Energy, National Security Agency and Air Force.

Although each competition is different, student teams are typically asked to solve real-world cybersecurity challenges, such as networking, system administration, reverse engineering, cryptography, hacking, programming and forensics, in real-time.

“These companies or government agencies are banking on the fact that schools send their best teams of students to these competitions,” says Thomas Nedorost, an associate instructor in the College of Engineering and Computer Science and the club’s faculty advisor since 2013 when it was formed by one student who wanted a chance to compete. “It is a recruiting event for them. They get to see the best students from each of the schools that are invited to participate.”

Expectations Exceeded

In 2013, Jonathan Singer ’13 was a 166su senior information technology student who was intent on making a name for himself when he approached Nedorost about obtaining grant funding. When the conversation quickly turned from trying to earn money to having some fun, the idea to start a cybersecurity club and team at 166su was born. The first club meeting exceeded expectations, attracting 86 students who had a strong interest in cybersecurity.

“Some of the most talented 166su students started to come out of the woodwork,” says

Singer, a cybersecurity consultant for Virginia-based GuidePoint Security. “I thought I was cool because I already had some industry experience, but the students that came to our first meetings were some of the most incredible and brilliant people I’ve ever met in my life.”

From those early meetings, word spread. Students from all disciplines began to take an interest in the club. Competitions expanded the club’s presence internationally. Today, Hack@166su is a juggernaut, featuring four students who have been drafted to the prestigious U.S. Cyber Team.

Recruiting Vehicle

Not only does Hack@166su participate in competitions worldwide — exposing members to internships, job opportunities, the chance to travel and scholarship money — it invites experts from major companies to campus to discuss the latest trends in offensive and defensive cybersecurity strategies. The workshops the club conducts on campus, in the community and at high schools are a huge recruiting vehicle to attract top students with strong aptitudes and an interest in cybersecurity to 166su.

“I’ve really enjoyed being with the club — it’s my favorite thing to do at 166su,” says senior Harrison Keating, the team’s captain who first learned of 166su due to the club’s participation in a collegiate cybersecurity competition. “Before I decided on 166su, I got a chance to attend a few club meetings and I was pretty much hooked from there.”

Keating says to sustain a top-rated cyber team requires as much as 20 hours of practice a week, which, for many club members, is compounded by classwork, internships, part-time employment and weekend competitions. It also demands financial support to cover competition registration fees, travel expenses, training materials, uniforms and out-of-state tuition waivers to recruit high-potential students to the team.

Labor Shortages

Companies, including Lockheed Martin, Harris, Northrup Grumman and Raytheon, that routinely hire 166sustudents as cybersecurity engineers and analysts, penetration testers, and developers have made donations in the past to offset those costs. Given the national shortage in cybersecurity talent, it is in the best interest of others to do so as well.

Support for Hack @ 166su helps to groom tomorrow’s workforce and increase the ranks of trained cyber professionals. To get involved, please contact Thomas Bolick, 407-823-0125; Thomas.Bolick@ucf.edu.

In the United States, the cybersecurity workforce boasts more than 1,178,662 jobs — with around 572,392 of them yet to be filled, according to CyberSeek, a project supported by the National Initiative for Cybersecurity Education (NICE), a program of the National Institute of Standards and Technology in the U.S. Department of Commerce.

“Cyberattacks can have serious consequences on just about everything — from the power grid to defense systems to our personal information,” Nedorost says. “It is imperative that organizations — industry and government — and concerned citizens continue to invest in developing new talent and cybersecurity programs at the university level to ensure tomorrow’s professionals have the essential skills to navigate these constantly evolving threats.”

 

 

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166su Is a Top University for Research and Development in Florida /news/ucf-is-a-top-university-for-research-and-development-in-florida/ Thu, 14 Dec 2023 16:47:06 +0000 /news/?p=138547 166su is No. 1 in Florida for computer and information sciences expenditures and No. 2 for engineering funding, according to a new NSF report.

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New data from the U.S. National Science Foundation’s Higher Education Research and Development (HERD) Survey shows 166su is a top university for research and development in Florida — and across the nation. The HERD Survey is the primary source of information on research and development expenditures at U.S. colleges and universities. Survey points were taken from FY 2022 (July 1, 2021 to June 30, 2022).

166su is No. 1 in Florida for computer and information sciences expenditures (and top 6% nationally) and No. 2 for engineering funding (top 20% nationally). The university also ranks in the top five in Florida for research backed by several national departments, including:

  • No. 2 for NASA funding in Florida — and top 9% nationally
  • No. 2 for Department of Defense funding in Florida — and top 15% nationally
  • No. 3 for U.S. National Science Foundation funding in Florida — and top 15% nationally
  • No. 3 for Department of Energy funding in Florida — and in the top 20% nationally
  • No. 5 for Department of Health and Human Services funding in Florida — and top 25% nationally
166su Interim Vice President for Research and Innovation Winston Schoenfeld

166su is also in the top 10% of expenditures in the nation for research in physics, computer and information sciences, non-science and engineering, and physical sciences. “I am very pleased at 166su’s continued growth in research expenditures, surpassing $220M for FY22,” says Winston Schoenfeld, UCF’s interim vice president for research and innovation. “This is the direct result of tireless work by our dedicated faculty, staff, and students, as well as our many partners, leading to new levels of innovation in research and discovery. Through their collective excellence, UCF continues to progress as one of the leading public research universities in the nation.”

166su also had an impact on higher education R&D expenditures this year. At higher education institutions in both survey populations, UCF finished in the top 19%, fifth in Florida. At expenditures at public institutions, UCF finished in the top 20%, fifth in Florida. Overall research and development spending by academic institutions nationwide totaled $97.8 billion in FY 2022, an increase of $8 billion from FY 2021.

Over the year, UCF’s projects were tied to a number of agencies and scientific disciplines:

Computer and Information Sciences

166su ranks ahead of all universities in Florida

Paul Gazzillo, an assistant professor in 166su’s Department of Computer Science, is leading research on a three-year, nearly $1 million Defense Advance Research Projects Agency Young Faculty award that will make investigations into corporate relationships easier and quicker by creating automated tools that help investigators track complex corporate relationships.

Department of Defense

166su ranks ahead of Florida International University (FIU), Florida State University (FSU) and the University of South Florida (USF)

166su Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering Associate Professor Kareem Ahmed, NanoScience Technology Center Assistant Professor Tania Roy, and 166su Materials Science and Engineering Professor Kevin Coffey were selected by the U.S. Department of Defense as part of the department’s Multidisciplinary University Research Initiative, which supports projects that range from advancing hypersonic propulsion to improving semiconductor performance and will fund the work for the next five years.

Engineering

166su ranks ahead of FSU, USF, FIU

Utilizing technology such as heart monitors with acoustic technology and biomechanical forces that can influence the early stages of heart disease, mechanical and aerospace engineers at 166su focus their expertise on finding creative solutions to heart disease, the leading cause of death for men and women in the United States.

National Aeronautics and Space Administration

166su ranks ahead of FSU and USF

Planetary scientists Kerri Donaldson Hanna and Adrienne Dove will lead a $35 million NASA science mission to land a spacecraft on the moon’s Gruithuisen Domes, a previously unexplored region. The robotic mission would launch in 2026 to study the domes’ chemical composition and how dust interacts with the spacecraft and a rover.

Physics

166su ranks No. 2 in Florida, and ahead of Florida Atlantic University (FAU), University of West Florida (UWF), University of North Florida (UNF) nationally

Tania Roy, an assistant professor in 166su’s Department of Materials Science and Engineering and NanoScience Technology Center, and Molla Manjurul Islam ’17MS, the study’s lead author and a doctoral student in 166su’s Department of Physics, have developed a device for artificial intelligence that mimics the retina of the eye. The development could lead to advanced AI that can instantly recognize what it sees, like automatic descriptions of pictures taken by a camera or phone. The technology also has applications in self-driving vehicles and robotics.

Department of Energy

166su ranks ahead of FIU, Florida A&M University (FAMU) and USF

Denisia Popolan-Vaida, an assistant professor in 166su’s Department of Chemistry, received a five-year, $800,000 grant from the Department of Energy to investigate elusive chemical compounds that could help mitigate the impact of combustion on the environment. The compounds, known as Criegee intermediates, form by reactions of ozone and hydrocarbons, and only within the last decade have scientists been able to directly measure them because of their low concentrations and short lifetime.

U.S. National Science Foundation

166su ranks head of USF, FIU and FAMU

Eight 166su professors who work with interdisciplinary teams to solve tech and health problems were named NSF CAREER award recipients. Some of the research includes Assistant Professor of Material Science and Engineering YeonWoong “Eric” Jung’s materials and nanotech research into pliable laptops and smartphones, as well as Assistant Professor of Material Science and Engineering and Biionix Faculty Cluster Initiative member Mehdi Razavi’s work into improving corrosion resistance to produce better magnesium-based bone implants.

Physical Sciences

166su ranks No. 3 in Florida, and ahead of FAU, UWF and UNF

Using data collected from Arecibo’s Planetary Radar, planetary scientist Luisa Fernanda Zambrano-Marin researched the 2019 asteroid OK that was headed toward Earth. The asteroid was between .04 and .08 miles in diameter and was moving fast, rotating for 3 to 5 minutes. The asteroid was part of only 4.2% of the known fast-rotating asteroids.

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166su Earns 4th CyberForce National Championship /news/ucf-earns-4th-cyberforce-national-championship/ Tue, 07 Nov 2023 17:40:42 +0000 /news/?p=137809 One team secured first place and another ranked fourth in the competition against some of the nation’s top cybersecurity students.

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166su is becoming a cybersecurity dynasty. A 166su student team defeated more than 94 teams from across the country last weekend to win the university’s fourth U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) CyberForce Competition. This year marks the 166su Collegiate Cyber Defense Club’s third consecutive win, and the university also placed first in 2018.

Also competing in the in-person competition in St. Charles, Illinois, another team of 166su students took fourth place. Each team included six students, many of whom are studying computer science, cyber security and privacy, digital forensics and information technology.

CyberForce addresses the U.S. government’s goal to promote cybersecurity workforce development by helping to build a pipeline of cyber professional candidates to enter the operational technology cybersecurity workforce.

“CyberForce helps our students strengthen the skills and confidence they need to be thoroughly prepared for successful careers after they graduate,” says the team’s faculty advisor and head coach Tom Nedorost.

Proof that the 166su students are prepared to become key players in the industry of cybersecurity, this year’s competitors have interned with such firms as Amazon, IBM, KPMG, Palo Alto Networks, Planate and Texas Instruments, and many are on pace to continue working for them after graduation.

166su is a powerhouse for cyber defense programs and is designated as a National Center of Academic Excellence in Cyber Defense Education and a National Center of Academic Excellence in Cyber Defense Research. In 2021, the U.S. National Science Foundation awarded a $2.9 million grant to provide cybersecurity scholarships to undergraduate and graduate students. 166su also houses a Cyber Security and Privacy Research Faculty Cluster Initiative, which examines a breadth of interdisciplinary areas.

The CyberForce Competition is sponsored by the DOE’s Office of Cybersecurity, Energy Security, and Emergency Response (CESER) and managed by Argonne National Laboratory (ANL). It started in 2016 to provide students with hands-on cybersecurity experience through interactive, energy cyber-focused scenarios.

In an increasingly digitized world, a skilled cybersecurity workforce becomes even more valuable to industry and the U.S. energy sector.

The Collegiate Cyber Defense Club at 166su, known as Hack@166su, boasts 312 members.

The annual CyberForce Competition uses a hands-on security approach to engage students in emergency scenarios, and challenges students to safeguard the nation’s critical energy sector. This year, the scenario involved students working for a distributed energy resource (DER) management company.

This year’s winning teams consisted of the following students:

Team A  (first place)
Jeffrey DiVincent ’23 (team captain)
Zachary Groome
Matthew McKeever
Caitlin Whitehead
Cameron Whitehead
Caleb Wisley

Team B  (fourth place)
Harrison Keating (team captain)
Milo Gilad
Colton Knight
Noah Magill
Caleb Sjostedt
Andrew Terry

The 166su Collegiate Cyber Defense Club’s fourth place team in the 2023 CyberForce Competition (left to right):Martin Roberts (assistant coach), Noah Magill, Harrison Keating (team captain), Colton Knight, Andrew Terry, Miles Gilad, Caleb Sjostedt, Tom Nedorost (coach).
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UCF-C3-Team-CyberForce_Fourth-Place_2023 The 166su Collegiate Cyber Defense Club's fourth place team in the 2023 CyberForce Competition (left to right):Martin Roberts (assistant coach), Noah Magill, Harrison Keating (team captain), Colton Knight, Andrew Terry, Miles Gilad, Caleb Sjostedt, Tom Nedorost (coach).