Cyber engineering, computer science | Joshua A. Wise
Cyber engineering, computer science | Joshua A. Wise
Hacking a safety app netted a Louisiana Tech University Computer Science graduate student a publishing credit, a trip to Hawaii, and the opportunity to present the research at an international conference.
Louisiana Tech Cyber Engineering alumnus and current MS Computer Science and CyberCorps ®: Scholarship for Service student Jonah Fitzgerald (‘22), along with fellow Cyber Engineering program alumni Thomas Mason (‘22) and Brian Mulhair (‘22), discovered a vulnerability in the Louisiana Department of Health COVID Defense contact tracing app that allows hackers to attack neighboring devices.
As seniors researching a paper assignment for Dr. William Bradley Glisson’s Computer Science 448/543, Cyber Engineering 404 “Reverse Engineering” class, the team discovered the symptoms history share feature of the app could be modified to send a malicious link via email, WIFI, and nearby share systems. The team was able to demonstrate two attacks using the link: They were able to harvest credentials by redirecting users to a fake page resembling the My.LA.Gov page and installing an Android app on the target phone to access all the information in that phone.
With additional guidance from Glisson, the team improved their results, presented the research to Glisson’s Cybersecurity Information Technology Exploration Research Group, and submitted the paper to the conference.
Fitzgerald then had the opportunity to travel to Ka’anapali Beach on the island of Maui to present the team’s findings at the 56th Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences “Internet and the Digital Economy” track and “Cybercrime” mini-track.
“I wanted to get involved with this research because I felt I could make a meaningful contribution to improving mobile app security and fighting the COVID-19 pandemic,” Fitzgerald said. “I feel that my Tech education in cyber engineering prepared me for success in solving these types of problems by rapidly learning new concepts like reverse engineering and tackling tough challenges in cybersecurity and computer science.”
Fitzgerald, who is continuing his graduate education with Louisiana Tech and is a member of the Louisiana Tech Research Institute (LTRI), a center of excellence that provides preeminent interdisciplinary research and integrated education capability to government and industry sponsors to solve complex emerging problems facing our nation, adds that he appreciates the support that he’s received from Glisson.
“I was the only one to present at the conference since this was my first research conference, and Dr. Glisson wanted me to get some experience. I was able to present alongside multi-disciplinary teams in cybercrime research and dark web drug sales. Conference participants came from across the world, and I was able to talk about research with people from California, Tennessee, Poland, Australia, South Korea, and Germany.”
Glisson says that he is a proponent of applied real-world cybersecurity research.
“Applied research allows students at all levels to test, refine, and implement concepts acquired in classroom environments. This experience enables them to make valuable contributions as members of the governmental and industrial workforce.”
Students enrolled in all levels of Louisiana Tech’s Cyber Engineering, and Computer Science programs have opportunities to engage in cybersecurity research. Contact Glisson to learn more.
Original source can be found here.