TUD-STG LangSec

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Website http://www.stg.tu-darmstadt.de/
Contact hermann@cs.tu-darmstadt.de
Description As researchers we are often a bit focused on our publication goals. This is not always a good thing. In this assembly we would like to reach out to the CCC community to discuss and to learn. We bring all the cool stuff we are working on. Moreover, we are much interested what the communities views on the intersection of programming languages and security is. Take a minute, come to our assembly, and discuss with us over Mate, Coffee or whatever-floats-your-bloat.
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Projects create project
Self-organized Sessions create self-organized session
Tags langsec, pl, java, programming, vulnerability
Registered on 27 November 2014 12:34:53
Location for self-organized sessions yes
Self-organized session notes We have some prepared content from our work, but would like to make the sessions more interactive in form of open discussions.

Content-/Topic-wise - Still in planning, but what we know right now: - Vulnerability analysis of TrueCrypt - Confused Deputy Vulnerability Detection in Java - Static Analysis for Vulnerability Finding - Automated Risk Analysis for Software Components - Dark Zones in the JDK - Horror, Terror, Confusion. - Language-based Security - Designing and implementing new programming languages that incorporate security features - ...

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Location ,
Orga contact hermann@cs.tu-darmstadt.de
Brings Projector (Standard-sized)
Seats needed 4
Extra seats 6
Assembly specification 2. We'd like to come together with a lot of people, a spot with lot's of people passing by and good visibility would be nice.
Planning notes We would like to have some white space (wall, pinboard, or such) for projection and some pinboard for poster, if possible. Thank you! :)

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As researchers we are often a bit focused on our publication goals. This is not always a good thing. In this assembly we would like to reach out to the CCC community to discuss and to learn. We bring all the cool stuff we are working on. Moreover, we are much interested what the communities views on the intersection of programming languages and security is. Take a minute, come to our assembly, and discuss with us over Mate, Coffee or whatever-floats-your-bloat.

Content-/Topic-wise - Still in planning, but what we know right now: - Vulnerability analysis of TrueCrypt - Confused Deputy Vulnerability Detection in Java - Static Analysis for Vulnerability Finding - Automated Risk Analysis for Software Components - Dark Zones in the JDK - Horror, Terror, Confusion. - Language-based Security - Designing and implementing new programming languages that incorporate security features - ...

Also we read a lot of research papers - if you need some formal list, here it is: http://www.thewhitespace.de/langsecrg.html