Author: Emerald Knox (Emerald Knox)

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Researchers Defeat 3D Printing Piracy with Hidden QR Codes

Researchers at NYU Tandon [School of Engineering] and NYU Abu Dhabi believe they have come up with a solution to foil counterfeiters and IP pirates. Their new method of identifying a unique device involves converting QR codes into 3D hidden features. … Nikhil Gupta, an associate professor of mechanical engineering, explains: “To create typical QR...

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Why adding bugs to software can make it safer

Brendan Dolan-Gavitt, assistant professor of computer science and engineering at NYU Tandon was one of the researchers on this study. That’s the basis for a new approach developed by Zhenghao Hu and colleagues at New York University. Why not fill ordinary code with benign bugs as a way of fooling potential attackers? The idea is...

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Four Years Experience: Making Sensibility Testbed Work for SAS

Y. Zhuang, A. Rafetseder, R. Weiss, and J. Cappos Sensibility Testbed is a framework for developing sensor-based applications that can run on user-provided smartphones, and is easy to program. Over the past four years, we have been organizing hackathons at SAS in order to perform semi-controlled experiments with this platform. Any smartphone user can install...

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Could deliberately adding security bugs make software more secure?

The best way to defend against software flaws is to find them before the attackers do. This is the unshakeable security orthodoxy challenged by a radical new study from researchers at New York University. The study argues that a better approach might be to fill software with so many false flaws that black hats get bogged...

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‘Chaff Bug’ Defense Rolls Out Shiny Objects for Attackers to Find

Camouflage and distraction have long been hallmarks of warfare, and it’s no different when it comes to the cyber-front. A group of researchers from New York University are taking the idea further than it’s gone before with the idea of introducing decoy bugs into code – ultimately non-exploitable vulnerabilities that can attract attacker interest and...

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To make systems safer, put more bugs in them

Instead of routinely hunting and killing bugs, new research is proposing the addition of a “chaff bug” in programs to make them safer. By making software “buggier,” hackers could be baited and therefore overwhelmed by the number of bugs in a system and eventually give up their search, according to a study by researchers Zhenghao...

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Protect your card details, identity from being doxxed

A recent study by New York University Tandon School of Engineering and the University of Illinois at Chicago (UIC) revealed the types of information that is typically exposed by doxxers: 90 percent of the time, the victim’s address is listed 61 percent included a phone number 53 percent included an email address 40 percent shared...

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Now Transparent: Political Advertising on Facebook, Instagram

Conceived by Computer Science and Engineering Assistant Professor Damon McCoy, the Online Political Ads Transparency Project has built easy-to-use tools to collect, archive, and analyze political advertising data. The researchers, including NYU Tandon doctoral student Laura Edelson and Shikhar Sakhuja NYUSH ‘19, pledged to improve the transparency of Facebook’s archive by releasing weekly updates of...