Difference between revisions of "CSE590TU"

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Welcome to the Autumn 2004 course Wiki for Information Technology & Public Policy (UW CSE P 590TU // UC Berkeley PP 190/290-009 // UCSD CSE 291).
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Welcome to the Autumn 2005 course Wiki for Cyber Security and Homeland Security (University of Washington CSE P 590TU // UC Berkeley PP 190/290-009 // UCSD CSE 291 (C00)).
  
 
==Announcements==
 
==Announcements==
* 11/1/04: [[Final Project Teams]] are posted. Check them asap, and make sure you are where you are supposed to be. Comments, questions, requests still being accepted.  Thanks, The Mgmt.
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* 8/11/05: Skeletal course web created. The course will begin for UCB students on August 31. The course will begin for UW and UCSD students on September 28.
  
* 10/14/04: [http://www.cs.washington.edu/education/courses/csep590tu/04au/project/project.doc Course project information] is available ([http://www.cs.washington.edu/education/courses/csep590tu/04au/project/project.pdf pdf here])!
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==Instructors==
 
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* [http://www-cms.llnl.gov/bios/hartmann-siantar.html Chris Hartmann-Siantar], Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory
* 10/11/04: Create a Wiki account [[Main Page | here]]! We are about to lock the account creation function (after which you will have to come groveling to Tap).
 
 
 
* 10/11/04: We have re-ordered some class content. The result is additional readings for this Thursday!  Please consult the [http://www.cs.washington.edu/education/courses/csep590tu/04au/papers/590TU.readings.doc reading list and course schedule]. Apologies for the late notice.
 
 
 
* 9/25/04: Two additional readings for the first class session: S. Maurer and S. Scotchmer, [http://socrates.berkeley.edu/~scotch/maurer_scotchmer.htm "Database Protection: Is It Broken and Should We Fix It,"] Science May 16, 1999; S. Maurer, P.B. Hugenholtz and H. Onsrud, [http://www.cs.washington.edu/education/courses/csep590tu/04au/readings/Science.pdf "Europe's Database Experiment,"] 294 Science 789 (2001) (password protected; password available on course email archive)
 
 
 
* 9/11/04: The topic of the first class session will be "Innovation Incentives." Please prepare by reading S. Maurer and S. Scotchmer, http://socrates.berkeley.edu/~scotch/prizes.pdf "Procuring Knowledge,"] Advances in the Study of Entrepreneurship, Innovation, and Economic Growth 15:1 (2004).
 
 
 
* 8/28/04: Please join the class [http://mailman.cs.washington.edu/mailman/listinfo/csep590tu mailing list]!.
 
  
==Instructors==
 
 
* [http://lazowska.cs.washington.edu/ Ed Lazowska], UW Computer Science & Engineering
 
* [http://lazowska.cs.washington.edu/ Ed Lazowska], UW Computer Science & Engineering
office hours: Mondays, 10-12, CSE 570 / 206-543-4755, or by appointment, or by [mailto:lazowska@cs.washington.edu email]
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office hours: TBD, CSE 570 / 206-543-4755, or by appointment, or by [mailto:lazowska@cs.washington.edu email]
  
 
* [http://ist-socrates.berkeley.edu/~scotch/maurer.htm Steve Maurer], UC Berkeley Goldman School of Public Policy
 
* [http://ist-socrates.berkeley.edu/~scotch/maurer.htm Steve Maurer], UC Berkeley Goldman School of Public Policy
office hours: TBD, or by appointment, or by [mailto:maurer@econ.berkeley.edu email]
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office hours: TBD, 307 GSPP / 510-848-3593, or by appointment, or by [mailto:maurer@econ.berkeley.edu email]
  
TA: [http://www.cs.washington.edu/homes/tapan Tapan Parikh], UW Computer Science & Engineering
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* [http://www-cse.ucsd.edu/users/savage/ Stefan Savage], UCSD Computer Science & Engineering
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office hours: TBD, EBU3B 3106 / 858-822-4895, or by appointment, or by [mailto:savage@cs.ucsd.edu email]
  
UCSD: [http://www.cs.ucsd.edu/~voelker/ Geoff Voelker] University of California, San Diego [mailto:voelker@cs.ucsd.edu email]
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* [http://www-cse.ucsd.edu/users/voelker/ Geoff Voelker], UCSD Computer Science & Engineering
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office hours: TBD, EBU3B 3108 / 858-822-3323, or by appointment, or by [mailto:voelker@cs.ucsd.edu email]
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TA: TBD
  
 
==Summary==
 
==Summary==
This course will introduce various information technology policy issues including the IT innovation ecosystem; Internet governance and use; electronic voting; intellectual property law and economics; technology transfer, intellectual property policies; antitrust; IT workforce issues; computer security and critical infrastructures; privacy and encryption; legislative threats; network markets, interoperability, and standards.
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This course will provide an introduction to the technical and policy issues surrounding homeland security and cyber security.
  
The course is a 4-site distance-learning experiment involving the University of Washington, UC Berkeley, UC San Diego, and Microsoft. Lead instructors will be Ed Lazowska (UW Computer Science & Engineering) and Steve Maurer (UCB Goldman School of Public Policy).
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The course is a 4-site distance-learning experiment involving the University of Washington, UC Berkeley, UC San Diego, and Microsoft. Lead instructors will be Ed Lazowska (UW Computer Science & Engineering), Steve Maurer (UCB Goldman School of Public Policy), Stefan Savage (UCSD Computer Science & Engineering), and Geoff Voelker (UCSD Computer Science & Engineering).
  
The course will meet <b>Thursday evenings from 6:30-9:20</b> (the UW classroom is CSE 305; the Berkeley classroom is 290 Hearst Mining Building; the Microsoft classroom is 113/1159; the UCSD classroom is AP&M 4301), with two 15-minute breaks at approximately 7:20 and 8:20. The <b>first course session</b> will be <b>Thursday September 30</b>. The final course session will be <b>Thursday December 10</b>. There will be <b>no class</b> on November 11 <b>(Veterans Day)</b> and <b>November 25 (Thanksgiving)</b>. There will thus be 9 3-hour course sessions.
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The course will meet <b>Wednesday evenings from 6:30-9:20</b> (the UW classroom is CSE 305; the Berkeley classroom is 290 Hearst Mining Building; the Microsoft classroom is 113/1159; the UCSD classroom is EBU3B 1202), with two 15-minute breaks at approximately 7:20 and 8:20.
  
Course requirements will include substantial reading, active class participation (to the extent possible given the crufty electronic format), and a substantial term project that is essentially a "balanced policy brief" on some topic related to IT policy.  
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For <b>Berkeley students</b>, the <b>first course session</b> will be <b>Wednesday August 31</b>. <b>UW and UCSD students</b> will join the course on <b>Wednesday September 28</b>. The <b>final course session</b> will be <b>Wednesday December 7</b>. The four Berkeley-only course sessions will focus on {homeland security - cyber security}. Of the eleven additional sessions, seven will focus on cyber security and the remaining four on other homeland security topics.
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Course requirements will include substantial reading, active class participation (to the extent possible given the crufty electronic format), a substantial small-group term project, and several small-group cyber security exercises.  
  
 
==Course Info==
 
==Course Info==
* Class schedule: Thursdays, 6:30pm - 9:20pm, September 30 through December 10 except November 11 and 25.
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* Class schedule: Wednesdays, 6:30pm - 9:20pm, August 31 through December 7 (Berkeley), September 28 through December 7 (UW, UCSD).
* Class locations: UW: CSE 305; UCB: 290 Hearst Mining Building; Microsoft: 113/1159; UCSD: AP&M 4301
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* Class locations: UW: CSE 305; UCB: 290 Hearst Mining Building; Microsoft: 113/1159; UCSD: EBU3B 1202
* [http://www.cs.washington.edu/education/courses/csep590tu/04au/ Course home page]
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* [http://www.cs.washington.edu/education/courses/csep590tu/05au/ Course home page]
 
* [http://mailman.cs.washington.edu/mailman/private/csep590tu/ Course mailing list]
 
* [http://mailman.cs.washington.edu/mailman/private/csep590tu/ Course mailing list]
 
* [http://mailman.cs.washington.edu/mailman/private/csep590tu/ Mailing list archive]
 
* [http://mailman.cs.washington.edu/mailman/private/csep590tu/ Mailing list archive]
  
 
==Course Readings and Schedule==
 
==Course Readings and Schedule==
* Reading list and Course schedule [http://www.cs.washington.edu/education/courses/csep590tu/04au/papers/590TU.readings.doc doc] [http://www.cs.washington.edu/education/courses/csep590tu/04au/papers/590TU.readings.pdf pdf]
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* [http://www.cs.washington.edu/education/courses/csep590/05au/syllabus.doc Preliminary Lecture schedule]
*[http://www.cs.washington.edu/education/courses/csep590tu/04au/lectures/ Lecture materials]
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* [http://www.cs.washington.edu/education/courses/csep590tu/05au/lectures/ Lecture materials]
*Course technology overview [http://www.cs.washington.edu/education/courses/csep590tu/04au/Presenter.Notes.doc doc] [http://www.cs.washington.edu/education/courses/csep590tu/04au/Presenter.Notes.pdf pdf]
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* Course technology overview [http://www.cs.washington.edu/education/courses/csep590tu/04au/Presenter.Notes.doc doc] [http://www.cs.washington.edu/education/courses/csep590tu/04au/Presenter.Notes.pdf pdf]
  
 
==Lecture Notes and Discussion==
 
==Lecture Notes and Discussion==
* [[Lecture 1]]: Innovation incentives ([http://ist-socrates.berkeley.edu/~scotch/maurer.htm Maurer])
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* [[Lecture 2]]: The IT innovation ecosystem:  universities, government, and industry ([http://lazowska.cs.washington.edu/ Lazowska])
 
* [[Lecture 3]]: Electronic voting ([http://verify.stanford.edu/dill/ David Dill, Stanford], plus Maurer and Lazowska)
 
* [[Lecture 4]]: Technology transfer, IP policies and Entrepeneurship ([http://www-cad.eecs.berkeley.edu/~newton/ Richard Newton, Berkeley], plus Maurer and Lazowska)
 
* [[Lecture 5]]: Free / Open Source Software ([http://www.law.washington.edu/Faculty/Gomulkiewicz/ Bob Gomulkiewicz], University of Washington, plus Maurer and Lazowska)
 
* [[Lecture 6]]: Anti-Trust ([http://ist-socrates.berkeley.edu/~scotch/maurer.htm Maurer])
 
* [[Lecture 7]]: Legislation: Spam; DMCA and DRM; P2P and copyright ([http://www.cs.princeton.edu/~felten/ Ed Felten, Princeton])
 
* [[Lecture 8]]: Computer security and critical infrastructures ([http://lazowska.cs.washington.edu/ Lazowska])
 
* [[Lecture 9]]: ICT and Rural Development ([http://www.cs.berkeley.edu/~brewer Eric Brewer] and [http://www.cs.washington.edu/homes/tapan Tapan Parikh])
 
  
 
==Course Project==
 
==Course Project==
*[[Project Schedule]]
 
*[[Project ideas]]
 
*[[Project instructions]]
 
*[[Final Project Teams]] - Hot off the presses!
 
  
 
==How to use this Wiki==
 
==How to use this Wiki==
  
 
* Visit the [[Help:Contents]] page.
 
* Visit the [[Help:Contents]] page.

Revision as of 23:42, 15 August 2005

Welcome to the Autumn 2005 course Wiki for Cyber Security and Homeland Security (University of Washington CSE P 590TU // UC Berkeley PP 190/290-009 // UCSD CSE 291 (C00)).

Announcements

  • 8/11/05: Skeletal course web created. The course will begin for UCB students on August 31. The course will begin for UW and UCSD students on September 28.

Instructors

office hours: TBD, CSE 570 / 206-543-4755, or by appointment, or by email

office hours: TBD, 307 GSPP / 510-848-3593, or by appointment, or by email

office hours: TBD, EBU3B 3106 / 858-822-4895, or by appointment, or by email

office hours: TBD, EBU3B 3108 / 858-822-3323, or by appointment, or by email

TA: TBD

Summary

This course will provide an introduction to the technical and policy issues surrounding homeland security and cyber security.

The course is a 4-site distance-learning experiment involving the University of Washington, UC Berkeley, UC San Diego, and Microsoft. Lead instructors will be Ed Lazowska (UW Computer Science & Engineering), Steve Maurer (UCB Goldman School of Public Policy), Stefan Savage (UCSD Computer Science & Engineering), and Geoff Voelker (UCSD Computer Science & Engineering).

The course will meet Wednesday evenings from 6:30-9:20 (the UW classroom is CSE 305; the Berkeley classroom is 290 Hearst Mining Building; the Microsoft classroom is 113/1159; the UCSD classroom is EBU3B 1202), with two 15-minute breaks at approximately 7:20 and 8:20.

For Berkeley students, the first course session will be Wednesday August 31. UW and UCSD students will join the course on Wednesday September 28. The final course session will be Wednesday December 7. The four Berkeley-only course sessions will focus on {homeland security - cyber security}. Of the eleven additional sessions, seven will focus on cyber security and the remaining four on other homeland security topics.

Course requirements will include substantial reading, active class participation (to the extent possible given the crufty electronic format), a substantial small-group term project, and several small-group cyber security exercises.

Course Info

  • Class schedule: Wednesdays, 6:30pm - 9:20pm, August 31 through December 7 (Berkeley), September 28 through December 7 (UW, UCSD).
  • Class locations: UW: CSE 305; UCB: 290 Hearst Mining Building; Microsoft: 113/1159; UCSD: EBU3B 1202
  • Course home page
  • Course mailing list
  • Mailing list archive

Course Readings and Schedule

Lecture Notes and Discussion

Course Project

How to use this Wiki