USC Viterbi Joins Northrop Grumman Cybersecurity Research Consortium

| May 20, 2013

Northrop Grumman and USC Viterbi join forces to combat cyber security threats

Today the USC Viterbi School of Engineering joins the Northrop Grumman Cybersecurity Research Consortium. USC Viterbi’s leadership in big data, computer science and informatics will expand the consortium’s breadth of research to further advance solutions to counter the newest and most pressing cyber threats to the economy and national security. The Viterbi School joins three more of the nation’s leading cybersecurity research universities in the Cybersecurity Research Consortium: Carnegie Mellon University, The Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and Purdue University.

“In today’s cyber environment, one of the biggest challenges our customers face is sifting through the enormous amounts of data flowing over their network, understanding its relevance and trustworthiness, and determining how it will affect their mission,” said Mike Papay, vice president and chief information security officer, Northrop Grumman. “When paired with Northrop Grumman’s deep domain knowledge and understanding of the globsal threat, USC’s long-term research in big data and analytics will help this industry/academic partnership transition inventive solutions to meet critical customer needs.”

Northrop Grumman’s Cybersecurity Research Consortium is a unique partnership of industry and academia founded in December 2009 which aims to advance research, facilitate collaboration among the nation’s top scientists, and accelerate solutions to counter the fast-changing threats from cyberspace. Today’s announcement marks the first additional school to join the consortium since its founding.

“We are honored to partner with Northrop Grumman and the other three academic institutions in the consortium,” said Yannis C. Yortsos, dean of the USC Viterbi School of Engineering. “Finding solutions in this very important area, which is also one of the grand challenges of engineering, will benefit both the public and the private sectors. Cybersecurity challenges are intertwined with big data issues. Our existing strengths in both these areas and in analytics provide a solid base upon which we augment the consortium’s innovative work and its mission.”

USC Viterbi will research issues surrounding security and trust in big data storage and processing, especially when managed by highly distributed systems. The School will draw upon its expertise in trusted systems and standards, verifiable protection, and high-assurance security that protect and defend against adversarial attacks and software subversion. USC Viterbi will also leverage its Information Sciences Institute (ISI), a world leader in the research and development of advanced information processing and computer and communications technology.

“Our team has in-depth knowledge of not only the scientific foundations of truly trustworthy high-assurance platforms, but also vast experience with practical deployment of focused government environments,” said Roger Schell, senior computer scientist, USC ISI. “We will expand and enhance these prior results into much broader and more important areas, such as securing big data for disparate domains in the cloud.”

The consortium will continue to address some of the world’s leading cyber problems including attribution in cyberspace, supply chain risk, and securing critical infrastructure networks. Members of the consortium coordinate research projects, share information and best practices, develop curricula, write joint case studies and other publications, and provide numerous learning opportunities and applications for students and the defense community overall.

Published on May 20th, 2013

Last updated on August 5th, 2021

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