The School of Architecture, Computing and Engineering is seeking a Research 
Assistant to work on
algorithms development in secure software engineering, within the Software 
Systems Engineering
Group ( www.uel.ac.uk/sse ) led by Dr Paolo Falcarin.

The ideal candidate should be educated to PhD level (or close to completion) in 
Computer Science,
Software Engineering, Information Security or related discipline, with research 
track record and relevant
experience in optimization algorithms development.
Candidates with experience in algorithms development from different fields 
(search based software
engineering, graph algorithms, data mining, machine learning, artificial 
intelligence) are welcome to
apply, providing they can demonstrate how to apply their knowledge to security 
evaluation of software
protections.

The position will is funded by the FP7 project ASPIRE (Advanced Software 
Protection: Integration,
Research and Exploitation), which aims at protecting mobile applications from 
reverse-engineering,
binary code analysis and tampering, by developing online-protection techniques 
based on dynamic code
updates and remote attestation from a trusted server. Such techniques are going 
to be integrated in the
ASPIRE tool-chain with other offline protections (obfuscation, anti-tampering, 
virtualization, white-box
cryptography, code diversity).

The ASPIRE project aims to renew the code in two dimensions: in space and in 
time. Renewability in
space (or software diversity) means that multiple semantically equivalent but 
syntactically different
versions of the code are distributed. Temporal renewability narrows the window 
of exposure of critical
code: by the time the attacker has analysed some protection mechanisms or 
succeeded to extract some
critical assets, the information obtained is obsolete. Temporal renewability 
means that code within one
program version is replaced by a new version during deployment. This can be 
done proactively at
regular time intervals or as a dynamic response after detecting malicious 
behaviour.
The security evaluation of the ASPIRE techniques developed by all the project 
partners is based on a
knowledge base of attacks modelled with high-level Petri nets and an 
Eclipse-based tool which will
estimate the overall attacker effort depending on the configuration of the 
deployed protections and
related code complexity metrics.
The project will perform empirical experiments on protected software with 
developers, in order to
estimate the attacker effort and validate the effort predicted by the security 
model based on code
metrics.
The successful candidate will join other two researchers in the ASPIRE team, in 
order to contribute to
the definition of the model for security evaluation of software protections 
attacks with particular focus
on different optimization problems arisen in this project:

1.            How to select the best group of diversified versions in order to 
minimize collusion attacks?
2.            How to choose the best combination of protections to maximize the 
attacker's effort, given a
knowledge base of possible attacks?
3.            How to choose the best set of code metrics to be used as 
indicator of the additional code
complexity introduced by a software protection?
4.            How to define metrics and security evaluation for online 
protections, where the code changes at
run-time?
EMPLOYMENT:

Type of contract: Research Assistant FTC for 20 months (with possible 
extension) Gross salary per year:
£32,000 to £35,950 per annum inclusive of London Weighting Start date: 
April/May 2015 End date:
December 2016
Place: London (UK)

APPLICATION:

To apply online, fill the application form at
http://jobs.uel.ac.uk/Vacancy.aspx?ref=026S2015
and attach your detailed CV, including a list of publications, technical 
skills, statement of research
interests and up to 2 reference letters.
For informal technical enquiries about the posts, feel free to contact Dr Paolo 
Falcarin by email at
[email protected]

Application deadline: 10th March 2015

For more information:

http://www.aspire-fp7.eu/
http://www.uel.ac.uk/sse/
http://jobs.uel.ac.uk/
http://www.uel.ac.uk/ace/

------------------------------------------------------
Paolo Falcarin, PhD
Reader
School of Architecture, Computing and Engineering (ACE) University of East 
London Docklands Campus -
4/6 University Way, E16 2RD, London
tel: +44 (0)20 8223 6086
http://www.uel.ac.uk/ace/staff/paolofalcarin/
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