CSE logo University of Washington Computer Science & Engineering
 CSE 484 / CSE M 584: Computer Security (Winter 2010)
  CSE Home   About Us    Search    Contact Info 

Course home
 Home
Administrivia
 Overview
 Using course email
 Context Forum
 Assignment Forum
Schedule
 Schedule
Assignments
 Homework
 Labs
Lab information
 Getting lab accounts
 Unix tutorials
   


Who Office Hours
Tadayoshi Kohno, Instructor
yoshi@cs
Mondays 9:30-10:20am
Slava Chernyak, TA
chernyak@cs
Wednesdays 9:30-10:20am, Room CSE 220
Alexei Czeskis, TA
aczeskis@cs
Miro Enev, TA
miro@cs
Thursdays 10:30-11:20am, Room CSE 220


Class Location and Time: MWF 8:30-9:20 EEB 125
Section Location and Time: Th 830-920 MGH 228
Th 930-1020 SAV 155

Prerequisites (CSE 484): CSE 326 and CSE 378. CSE 303 is highly recommended.
You should have maturity in both the mathematics of computer science and in the engineering of computer systems. This means that you should: have a good understanding of data structures and algorithms; be comfortable writing programs from scratch in C and Java; be comfortable writing and debugging assembly code; and be comfortable in a command-line Unix development environment (gdb, gcc, etc). You should also have a good understanding of computer architecture, operating systems, and computer networks. Most importantly, you should be eager to challenge yourself and learn more!
Prerequisites (CSE M 584): CSE 378; one of CSE 451 or 461.

Required textbook: Foundations of Security, Daswani, Kern, and Kesavan, ISBN 1-59059-784-2.
Further reading: Handbook of Applied Cryptography, Menezes, van Oorschot, and Vanstone. Available online.
Security Engineering, Anderson. Available online.
Principles of Computer System Design, Chapter 11, Kaashoek and Saltzer. Available online only. This book has not yet been published, so do not redistribute.
Security in Computing, Fourth Edition, Pfleeger and Pfleeger, ISBN 0-13-239077-9.
Network Security, Second Edition, Kaufman, Perlman, and Speciner, ISBN 0-13-046019-2.
Information Security, Stamp, ISBN 978-0-471-73848-0.
Writing Security Tools and Exploits, Foster and Liu, ISBN 1-59749-997-8
No Tech Hacking: A Guide to Social Engineering, Dumpster Diving, and Shoulder Surfing, Long, ISBN 1597492159

Acknowledgements: We thank Intel for donating hardware used in this course.

Anonymous feedback can be sent to the course instructor or TA using this form.

CSE logo Computer Science & Engineering
University of Washington
Box 352350
Seattle, WA  98195-2350
(206) 543-1695 voice, (206) 543-2969 FAX