[Colloq] Colloquium Talk: Wednesday, June 26 @ 2 pm in ISEC 655/ Zhenkai Liang "Scaling up Binary Analysis via Knowledge-oriented Techniques"

Khoury Academic Affairs khoury-academicaffairs at northeastern.edu
Wed Jun 19 10:35:55 EDT 2019


Colloquium Talk: Wednesday, June 26 @ 2 pm, 655 ISEC/ Zhenkai Liang " Scaling up Binary Analysis via Knowledge-oriented Techniques"

Speaker: Zhenkai Liang
Date: Wednesday, June 26, 2019
Time: 2:00 pm
Location: 655 ISEC
Title: "Scaling up Binary Analysis via Knowledge-oriented Techniques"

Abstract:
Binary analysis is a fundamental technique in software and system security. It has a wide range of applications, such as vulnerability discovery, attack response, malware analysis, and software testing and debugging. Due to the lack of high-level semantics and complex program behaviors, it is challenging for binary analysis solutions to scale up to large binaries in practice. Existing solutions are often driven by specific tasks, where the practical time limit hinders comprehensively understanding of binaries. Furthermore, it is also difficult to integrate the knowledge generated across different solutions. In this talk, we discuss our research in scaling up binary analysis in a knowledge-oriented manner. We believe knowledge abstraction is the key to scale up binary analysis, where binary analysis solutions generate understandings that can be shared and reused in other solution. Our investigation includes techniques for knowledge extraction,  tools for knowledge integration, and platforms for knowledge accumulations and sharing.  The accumulated knowledge not only allows broader and deeper analysis into binaries. It also enables emerging data-driven and learning techniques to be effectively adopted in binary analysis solutions. In this talk, I will also share our experience and reflection in system security education.

Bio:

Zhenkai Liang is an Associate Professor of the School of Computing, National University of Singapore. His main research interests are in system and software security, web security, mobile security, and program analysis. He is also the Co-Lead PI of National Cybersecurity R&D Lab in Singapore. He has served as the technical program committee members of many system security conferences, including the ACM Conference on Computer and Communications Security (CCS), USENIX Security Symposium and the Network and Distributed System Security Symposium (NDSS), as well as a member of NDSS Steering Group. As a co-author, he received the Best Paper Award in ICECCS 2014, the Best Paper Award in W2SP 2014, the ACM SIGSOFT Distinguished Paper Award at ESEC/FSE 2009, the Best Paper Award at USENIX Security Symposium 2007, and the Outstanding Paper Award at ACSAC 2003.  He also won the Annual Teaching Excellence Award of National University of Singapore in 2014 and 2015.  He received his Ph.D. degree in Computer Science from Stony Brook University in 2006, and B.S. degrees in Computer Science and Economics from Peking University in 1999.

Faculty Host: Long Lu


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