Click here to receive your FREE subscription to Campus Technology
Home > Students Get Taste of Real-life Cyber Defense in National Championship
News
Students Get Taste of Real-life Cyber Defense in National Championship
4/22/2008
By Dian Schaffhauser
Texas A&M University looked to defend its National Champions title against five teams at the
National Collegiate Cyber Defense Competition (NCCDC) this weekend but lost out to
Baker College of Flint, MI. The third-annual NCCDC was hosted by the
University of Texas at San Antonio's
Center for Infrastructure Assurance and Security (CIAS), a cyber security education and research center.
Competition organizers cited Baker's focus on "fundamentals" for its victory in what it described as a "spirited" competition.
For the competition, each team was required to correct problems on their network,
perform typical business tasks and defend their networks from a red
team that generates live, hostile activity throughout the competition.
The teams were scored on their performance in those three areas.
The CCDC program has grown from five schools in 2005 to 56 schools in 2008 with six regional competitions taking place nationwide. The 2008 national competition featured Baker College; the 2007 defending champions, Texas A&M; the
Community College of Baltimore County;
Mt. San Antonio College of Los Angeles County;
Rochester Institute of Technology; and the
University of Louisville. The participants advanced to the National CCDC after winning regional competitions.
The CCDC program is sponsored in part through donations from businesses in the communications and IT industries.
The competition allows teams of college students to apply their information assurance and information technology education in a competitive environment. The competitions focus on business operations and incorporate the operational aspect of managing and protecting an existing network infrastructure. The teams inherit an "operational" network from a fictional business complete with e-mail, Web sites, data files, and users.
"We had many visiting faculty members benefit from last year's national competition as they experienced first-hand what it would be like to have to protect a company's infrastructure in a hostile Internet environment," said Greg White, director of CIAS. "Some of the faculty even changed their instructional programs as a result of lessons learned from the competition."
Dian Schaffhauser is a writer who covers technology and business. Send your higher education technology news to her at dian@dischaffhauser.com.
Cite this Site
Dian Schaffhauser, "Students Get Taste of Real-life Cyber Defense in National Championship," Campus Technology, 4/22/2008, http://www.campustechnology.com/article.aspx?aid=61147
copy text (above) for proper citation
Recommended Reading
- RIAA Outsources Fingering of Students Who Share Music Illegally
The RIAA is outsourcing the hunt for music thieves. Its largest target currently is those who operate from within colleges and universities, a move that has piqued the attention of Educause.
- Microsoft Expands Education Footprint in Asia Pacific Region
Microsoft Chairman Bill Gates announced new partnerships to extend accessibility and computer literacy in the Asia Pacific region during a speech in Jakarta at a government leader gathering earlier this week.
- IT Struggling Over Security, Compliance
IT pros are having a hard time balancing security, software patch management and IT auditing with a host of other duties, according to a survey released Monday by Shavlik Technologies.
- Toronto College Upgrades Network with Gigabit Ethernet Wireless Links
Toronto-based George Brown College has gone public about its deployment of six BridgeWave GE60 wireless links to upgrade its campus-wide network.
- Gates Highlights R&D at CES08, Unveils Microsoft Touch Wall
Microsoft's Chairman Bill Gates spent a lot of time Wednesday talking about "empowering the workers" at the Microsoft's 12th annual CEO Summit 2008 in Redmond, WA, where he gave a keynote speech. However, Gates wasn't talking about political revolutions or even pay raises for office workers before the CEO crowd. Instead, he was referring to new software technologies that can better enable collaboration, social networking and decision-making on the job.
- Vista Vulnerability Study Puts Microsoft on Defensive
Microsoft and some independent security researchers had the blogosphere buzzing Wednesday over a series of denunciations after one company claimed that the Vista operating system was more vulnerable to malware and other exploits than previous operating systems.