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STEM

Information Security Club Takes Gold at NCAC

Thursday, September 22, 2016, By J.D. Ross
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School of Information Studies
Four people standing

Information Security Club members who participated in NCAC, from left to right, are Michael Hartley, Siddhesh Wadikar, coach Bahram Attaie and Benjamin Murray

A team of graduate students from the  and Telecommunications and Network Management programs at the (iSchool) and from the  have won the gold award in Phase I of the (䴡).

Twenty schools participated in the first phase of competition. The 鶹Ƶteam will now advance to the finals in October in Washington, D.C. The students are all members of the iSchool’s .

The challenge was an online contest, and a different format from how the club’s members were used to participating in cyber challenges.

“We typically participate in offensive-natured competitions, where teams defend their systems against hackers,” explains iSchool Assistant Professor of Practice , who serves as the club’s coach and advisor. “This competition was much more forensic based. Students were given tasks to carry out. For example, they were provided with a set of files and asked to look into them for anomalies or hidden information.”

The competition, a joint initiative between Lockheed Martin and Temple University’s  (IBIT), provided the students with a valuable opportunity to analyze data from a real-world cyber incident, an experience often missing in typical academic coursework and capture-the-flag competitions.

This is the first time Syracuse’s Information Security Club has competed in NCAC and they were introduced to it by iSchool adjunct professors Dan Smith and Tim Van Waes, who are both cybersecurity specialists at Lockheed Martin.

“Dan and Tim have been terrific mentors for the students,” says Attaie. “They have spent many late hours to support our teams in competitions like these.

The gold award provides the team with $12,000 of funding, an industry mentor, valuable training sessions, and a trip to Washington, D.C., to compete in the final phase of the competition in the hope of winning $25,000. The final phase will consist of a live competition that will emphasize the skills necessary to be an accomplished cyber analyst.

iSchool graduate student Michael Hartley was the team leader. Other team members included Bilal Alsharifi, Benjamin Murray, Yicheng Shen and Siddhesh Wadikar

Hartley credits the win, in part, to taking a graduate course in  (IST 602) with iSchool adjunct professor . Pollitt, who has a distinguished career as a military officer and FBI agent, instructs his students in proper forensic procedures, Hartley notes.

“Our Information Security Club has created a culture of learning here at the school, and cyber security is a huge draw,” explains Attaie. “You can’t be good at it unless you live and breath it, practice it on a regular basis, and the club and competitions like this one allow our students to do just that.”

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J.D. Ross

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