The SFS Summer Research Study at UMBC: Project-Based Learning Inspires Cybersecurity Students
May 30-June 2, 2017, Scholarship for Service (SFS) scholars at the University of Maryland, Baltimore County (UMBC) analyzed the security of a targeted aspect of the UMBC computer systems. During this hands-on study, with complete access to source code, students identified vulnerabilities, devised an...
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Zusammenfassung: | May 30-June 2, 2017, Scholarship for Service (SFS) scholars at the University
of Maryland, Baltimore County (UMBC) analyzed the security of a targeted aspect
of the UMBC computer systems. During this hands-on study, with complete access
to source code, students identified vulnerabilities, devised and implemented
exploits, and suggested mitigations. As part of a pioneering program at UMBC to
extend SFS scholarships to community colleges, the study helped initiate six
students from two nearby community colleges, who transferred to UMBC in fall
2017 to complete their four-year degrees in computer science and information
systems.
The study examined the security of a set of "NetAdmin" custom scripts that
enable UMBC faculty and staff to open the UMBC firewall to allow external
access to machines they control for research purposes. Students discovered
vulnerabilities stemming from weak architectural design, record overflow, and
failure to sanitize inputs properly. For example, they implemented a
record-overflow and code-injection exploit that exfiltrated the vital API key
of the UMBC firewall.
This report summarizes student activities and findings, and reflects on
lessons learned for students, educators, and system administrators. Our
students found the collaborative experience inspirational, students and
educators appreciated the authentic case study, and IT administrators gained
access to future employees and received free recommendations for improving the
security of their systems. We hope that other universities can benefit from our
motivational and educational strategy of teaming educators and system
administrators to engage students in active project-based learning centering on
focused questions about their university computer systems. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.1811.04794 |