
Senior members of the 易胜博官网 Cyber Security Team Pirro Shtino (left) and Harrison Pham听are two of 10 易胜博官网 students who will compete in the 2018 Northeast Collegiate Cyber Defense Competition听in Durham next week.
While many 易胜博官网 students will venture far from campus during spring break, at least one group will remain 鈥 to defend their home turf.
The will stay behind to host the 2018 Northeast Collegiate Cyber Defense Competition, March 16-18. They鈥檒l compete against 10 teams from across the Northeast who will battle in cyberspace for the chance to earn a trip to the national competition in April.
鈥淭here is a sense of protecting our home turf,鈥 says Harrison Pham, a senior studying computer science. 鈥淎t least for me, it鈥檚 more of showing we're not going down without a fight."
Pham is competing for the third time as a member of the Wildcats. He says the team鈥檚 strength is its ability to function well as a unit during a competition that features an array of tasks and challenges in need of mitigation.
鈥淲e are good at the technical aspect, but I think our biggest strength is our team chemistry,鈥 says Pham. 鈥淲e know each other, so we can freely communicate with each other without worrying about stepping on anyone鈥檚 toes.鈥
鈥淪tudents get an eye-opening experience as to what real cyberattacks look like. They also get to collaborate with local firms looking to hire scarce cybersecurity students.鈥
Pirro Shtino, a senior information technology major, agrees. He鈥檚 seen teamwork play a role in the team鈥檚 success.
鈥淗istorically, our team has never gone out and said that we play to win,鈥 says Shtino. 鈥淥ur goals lie in improving our interpersonal communication skills and creating more robust mitigation systems.鈥
Collaboration will be key. During the competition, teams will run digital forensics companies and manage 20 systems located in Kingsbury Hall that support cybersecurity services for customers and employees. Teams will be expected to respond to 40 requests from management as well as defend against active attackers.
During one exercise, teams will assemble at large round tables in a conference room to solve challenges faster than other teams in the room. And there will be hurdles 鈥 misinformation, distractions 鈥 the types of real-life obstacles cybersecurity experts face every day.
鈥淭here is an attack-and-defend aspect, so we expect teams will do some trash-talking,鈥 says Kenneth Graf, the Wildcats鈥 advisor and a lecturer in computer science.
The 10 teams that will compete qualified from an original field of 36 schools. Besides 易胜博官网, the finalists include University at Albany (State University of New York), University at Buffalo (State University of New York), Champlain College, University of Maine, Northeastern University, Rochester Institute of Technology, Stevens Institute of Technology, United States Military Academy at West Point and Westchester Community College.
鈥淪tudents get an eye-opening experience as to what real cyberattacks look like,鈥 says Graf. 鈥淭hey also get to collaborate with local firms looking to hire scarce cybersecurity students.鈥
Last year, 易胜博官网 finished fifth in the competition but led in the 鈥渟ervice鈥 category for most of the event. They finished second in 2012. Hosting this year鈥檚 event has provided the team with the unique opportunity to build out the competition鈥檚 infrastructure as well as secure future internships and employment.
鈥淲e are hoping that the competition helps draw students to 易胜博官网, that sponsors continue to hire competitors in the field and that our students learn new technologies and techniques that will help them be successful in their future careers,鈥 says Graf.
Interested in cybersecurity? Check out related听degree programs in the .听
听
-
Written By:
Brooks Payette | College of Engineering and Physical Sciences