The UMBC Cyber Defense Lab presents
MeetingMayhem: Teaching Adversarial Thinking through a Web-Based Game
Akriti Anand, Richard Baldwin, Sudha, Kosuri, Julie Nau, and Ryan Wunk-Fink
UMBC Cyber Defense Lab
joint work with Alan Sherman, Marc Olano, Linda Oliva, Edward Zieglar, and Enis Golazewski
12:00 noon–1 pm ET, Friday, 9 April 2021
online via WebEx
We present our progress and plans in developing MeetingMayhem, a new web-based educational exercise that helps students learn adversarial thinking in communication networks. The goal of the exercise is to arrange a meeting time and place by sending and receiving messages through an insecure network that is under the control of a malicious adversary. Players can assume the role of participants or an adversary. The adversary can disrupt the efforts of the participants by intercepting, modifying, blocking, replaying, and injecting messages. Through this engaging authentic challenge, students learn the dangers of the network, and in particular, the Dolev-Yao network intruder model. They also learn the value and subtleties of using cryptography (including encryption, digital signatures, and hashing), and protocols to mitigate these dangers. Our team is developing the exercise in spring 2021 and will evaluate its educational effectiveness.
Akriti Anand (*protected email*) is an MS student in computer science working with Alan Sherman. She is the lead software engineer and focuses on the web frontend. Richard Baldwin (*protected email*) is a BS student in computer science, a member of Cyberdawgs, and lab manager for the Cyber Defense Lab. Sudha Kosuri (*protected email*) is a MS student in computer science. She is working on the frontend (using React and Flask) and its integration with the backend. Julie Nau (*protected email*) is a BS student in computer science. She is working on the backend and on visualizations. Ryan Wunk-Fink (*protected email*) is a PhD student in computer science working with Alan Sherman. He is developing the backend.
Host: Alan T. Sherman, *protected email* Support for this event was provided in part by the National Science Foundation under SFS grant DGE-1753681. The UMBC Cyber Defense Lab meets biweekly Fridays. All meetings are open to the public.
Upcoming CDL Meetings: April 23, Peter Peterson (Univ. of Minnesota Duluth), Adversarial thinking; May 7, Farid Javani (UMBC), Anonymization by oblivious transfer
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