Research output per year
Research output per year
Research in the Security (SEC) group spans two areas vital to the security of decentralized and embedded systems, and has its center of gravity in the intersection of these areas. The two areas are security policy specification & enforcement and security of embedded systems.
Policy Specification and Enforcement. While the Internet allows for a free exchange of data, the security boundaries needed to guarantee privacy and confidentiality have become the main obstacle to flexible cooperation within and between (virtual) organizations.
The classical preventive access control mechanisms cannot cope with heterogeneous distributed systems and they have to be at least partially replaced by more elaborate trust management and compliance control systems. This is where SEC expertise lies: in the specification and implementation of policies for distributed systems.
Securing networked embedded systems is particularly challenging because of their lack of computational and physical resources. In this area, SEC focuses presently on the security of mobile (e.g. smart-card based) systems; for instance in the PinpasJC project we are studying side channel attacks on smart cards.
One of the challenges that embedded devices face is secure key storage. This issue is addressed by SEC's research on Physical Unclonable Functions, a novel approach based on the extraction of randomness from the physical components of the device itself. Also in this area and closely linked to coding and crypto we have the project PinpasJC (on the analysis of smart card algorithms to identify possible side-channel attacks).
These areas overlap to a great extent and their intersection forms the core of SEC's research: compliance control for distributed and embedded systems. SEC's approach is to start from a concrete security problem and solve it by addressing the fundamental issues behind it. SEC's strength lies precisely in the ability to understand deeply both the user's concern as well as the theory behind it.
There are many options for master thesis projects, both internal projects and projects in industry.
See the website for more information on the group and its projects.
Person: Prom. : doctoral candidate (PhD)
Person: UD : Assistant Professor
Person: Prom. : doctoral candidate (PhD), OWP : University Teacher / Researcher
Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding › Conference contribution › Academic › peer-review
Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding › Conference contribution › Academic › peer-review
Research output: Thesis › Phd Thesis 1 (Research TU/e / Graduation TU/e)
Luca Allodi (Manager) & Ganduulga Gankhuyag (Manager)
SecurityFacility/equipment: Research lab
Sandro Etalle (Manager), Luca Allodi (Manager) & Nicola Zannone (Manager)
SecurityFacility/equipment: Research lab
Luca Allodi (Manager) & Ganduulga Gankhuyag (Manager)
SecurityFacility/equipment: Research lab
Rosso, Martin (Recipient), Campobasso, Michele (Recipient), Gankhuyag, Ganduulga (Recipient) & Allodi, Luca (Recipient), 9 Dec 2020
Prize: Other › Career, activity or publication related prizes (lifetime, best paper, poster etc.) › Scientific
Cappers, Bram C.M. (Recipient), 4 Jul 2020
Prize: Other › Career, activity or publication related prizes (lifetime, best paper, poster etc.) › Scientific
3/06/21
17 items of Media coverage
Press/Media: Expert Comment
16/04/21
3 items of Media coverage
Press/Media: Expert Comment
1/04/21
1 item of Media coverage
Press/Media: Expert Comment
Supervisor: Medeiros de Carvalho, R. (Supervisor 1), Gallucci, A. (Supervisor 2) & Vanschoren, J. (Supervisor 2)
Student thesis: Master
Supervisor: Allodi, L. (Supervisor 1) & Dagrada, M. (External person) (External coach)
Student thesis: Master
Supervisor: Allodi, L. (Supervisor 1) & Dagrada, M. (External person) (External coach)
Student thesis: Master