[The University of New South Wales]

COMP3441/9441
Cryptography and Security
2005 Session 2

School of Computer Science and Engineering
The University of New South Wales
Sydney Australia

2005 Subject Schedule

subject to change

[zoom out]
Week
monday
First Lecture
5:05-?Second Lecture
?-8pmSeminar
8:10-9pm
Homework Crypto Lab
discussexercises BlackWhite
1.
25 Jul
Introduction **
Black hats, script kiddies, law, ethics **** no seminar no tutes no labs -
-
2.
1 Aug
The development of codes ****
Access control, site security, social engineering, recon ** optional lecture
TCP/IP review
tutorial no labs ? -
3.
8 Aug
Confidentiality with secret keys ***
Passwords *
Attack methods
- recon
- penetration
**
optional lecture
Maths review
tutorial recon lab sniff ?
4.
15 Aug
Hashing ** Firewalls, NAT, Network design **** Sniffing tutorial overflow lab firewall
5.
22 Aug
Confidentiality with public keys **** TCP/IP scans & attacks ** Firewalls tutorial sniffing lab
6.
29 Aug
Signatures **** Intrusion detection systems **  Civil Liberty tutorial firewall lab wireless
7.
5 Sep
PKI**** Host hardening ** Wireless Security tutorial civil lib lab IDS
8.
12 Sep
SSL + IPsec ****
VPNs ** Intrusion Detection
Systems
tutorial wireless lab
9.
19 Sep
Zero Knowledge Protocols ***** Honeypots, honeytokens *
+ WEP mini-review
Denial of Service tutorial IDS lab denial
of
service
Midsession Break
(26 Sept - 2 Oct)
review
10.
3 Oct
public holiday no tutes review lab
11.
10 Oct
Security Engineering Risk Tunnelling
(aka VPNs)
tutorial DOS lab honey
12.
17 Oct
Security Models: military, commercial. Case Study: The Human Element
Case Study: Bookkeeping
Honeypots tutorial Tunneling lab malware
13.
24 Oct
Security Policy
writing, managing, incident & disaster response
Case Study: Tamper Proof
Case Study: ATMs
Malware tutorial honeypot lab
14.
31 Oct
Case Study: nuclear

Review
- feedback
- exam
- Q&A
Review Seminar tutorial malware lab -

Aproximate time allocation is 30 minutes per *
  eg.
    * = 30 minute lecture
   ** = 60 minute lecture
  *** = 90 minute lecture

last modified 13 May 2006 | maintained by richard buckland