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02/06/22: Trojan Source Attacks with Nicholas Boucher

02/06/22: Trojan Source Attacks with Nicholas Boucher

FromBoston Computation Club


02/06/22: Trojan Source Attacks with Nicholas Boucher

FromBoston Computation Club

ratings:
Length:
65 minutes
Released:
Feb 7, 2022
Format:
Podcast episode

Description

Nicholas Boucher is a PhD student in computer science studying under Professor Ross Anderson at the Cambridge Computer Laboratory.  He is also one of the authors of Trojan Source Attacks, a paper (and CVE, and vulnerability class) which highlighted supply-chain vulnerabilities in open-source software (among other things) due to code that is different than it looks.  This is one of the most creative hacks we saw in 2021 and we were thrilled to have Nicholas tell us about it.  The presentation was great, as was the discussion, where we got into the difficulties of the disclosure process, the complexities of peer review (in tandem with ethical vulnerability disclosure), and future problems (????are emojis kosher??).  We hope you enjoy!

Nicholas's homepage can be found HERE.
You can read the Trojan Source Attacks paper HERE.
You can see the video of this talk HERE.
Released:
Feb 7, 2022
Format:
Podcast episode

Titles in the series (53)

The Boston Computation Club is a small seminar group focused on mathematical computer science, and computational mathematics. Its name is plagiarized from the London Computation Club. Boston Computation Club meetings occur roughly every other week, on weekends, around 5pm EDT (modulo speaker availability). The usual format is a 20m presentation followed by 40m of discussion. Some, but not all, meetings are posted on YouTube and in podcast form.