17c起草社区 teaches students how to hack technology
鈥淲e hack everything.鈥
These are the words of Brian Paige, associate vice president for information technology at 17c起草社区.
That鈥檚 right鈥攖he words of 17c起草社区鈥檚 chief information officer.
At 3:30 p.m. on Mondays and Thursdays, he and his students are busy at work.
鈥淭his is a hacking class,鈥 said Paige.
Hitting the range
Information Security (CS364) is co-taught by Paige and his colleague Adam Vedra, the university鈥檚 chief information security officer.
The two spend a lot of time with their students in the , a virtual computer security lab built specifically for practicing hacking and counter-hacking techniques in a controlled environment.
鈥淭he Cyber Range provides an environment to explore legally and safely some of the tools related to cyber security,鈥 said Enoch Mwesigwa, a senior . 鈥淭his helped me to better understand the hacker mindset as well as how to thwart and detect them.鈥
It鈥檚 the reason Vedra and Paige want their students to not only learn the concepts, but practice them in a lab.
鈥淲e have the opportunity in the range to setup environments that mimic real-world situations,鈥 said Vedra. 鈥淭hey are walking through the steps an attacker would go through to get information and passwords. It opens their eyes to see in some sense how easy it can be if you are properly trained 鈥 and it gives them the skills to know how to defend against those sorts of attacks.鈥
Making timely and historical connections
The labs mimic real-world situations, but so do the concepts discussed in class.
鈥淓very one of our classes could be ripped from the headlines. We often take the daily headline literally from the Wall Street Journal or New York Times or Wired, whatever about nation state cyber war or hacks of credit card companies,鈥 said Paige. 鈥淭he reason it is so engaging is because you can find the same topics we are talking about reported in the daily news.鈥
And while the relevancy of the concepts appeal to students, so too does situating the topics in an historical context.
鈥淥ne aspect of this course that stood out to me is how the professors talked about cybersecurity being a product of 鈥榚volution鈥 not 鈥榬evolution,鈥欌 that hacking isn鈥檛 a radically new method of compromising a system, rather is an evolution of previous methods of espionage or sabotage,鈥 said Mwesigwa. 鈥淚t鈥檚 fascinating how true that is. Malware is introduced to a system in a similar way the Trojan Horse breached the walls of Troy. Hackers evaluate the vulnerabilities of networks in a similar way scouts would evaluate the vulnerabilities on a castle in medieval times.鈥
And Paige says it even goes back further than that.
鈥淭he bible doesn鈥檛 talk a lot about computer security, but the whole idea of wars and seasons of war and Shibboleth and to be able to transfer encoded messages, we also find that biblically,鈥 said Paige. 鈥淲e surprise our students by going all the way back to there actually.鈥
鈥淜nowledge of this demystifies some of the jargon and methodology in cyber security,鈥 said Mwesigwa. 鈥淭his will both help me explain technical aspects of security to someone less technologically inclined (which is a valuable skill in software development) and aid in the way I approach evaluating and securing a system.鈥
Prepared to lead
It鈥檚 an important skill for Enoch to have learned as he is stepping into a software development position at Bloomberg after graduation this May.
鈥淭his class has already changed the way I approach software development,鈥 said Mwesigwa. 鈥淚鈥檓 more conscious of and educated on various industry security standards.鈥
It鈥檚 the reason the chief information officer and the chief information security officer at 17c起草社区 are teaching students how to hack.
鈥淲e give students a tool kit so they can use different measures or countermeasures. We have a tool that breaks passwords, that can take control of someone鈥檚 machine, that can turn on and off a webcam,鈥 said Paige. 鈥淥nce the students realize how prevalent these tools are, how easy to use, once they are trained on how to do the countermeasures, they are moved from fear to informed suspicion, and they start to think about how do I defend against it.鈥
In essence, they start to develop a playbook.
鈥淚n order for a football team to develop a good defense, they need to understand how the offense is done, all the positions, the players, how it all works,鈥 said Vedra. 鈥淪o, that鈥檚 what we are doing here. We are simply showing students this is how the offense works and asking them: how will you develop a defense?鈥