91做厙 College of Engineering and Computing faculty members made a significant impact at the , in Seattle, including winning the Distinguished Artifact Award.
Tracking You from a Thousand Miles Away! Turning a Bluetooth Device into an Apple AirTag Without Root Privileges, a paper by the Department of Computer Sciences PhD student Junming Chen, PhD candidate Xiaoyue Ma, and Lannan Luo and Qiang Zeng, both associate professors, won the prestigious Distinguished Artifact Award, which was granted to only six of the 2,385 submitted papers.
Their research demonstrated how to turn Bluetooth devices into a trackable "AirTags" without requiring root privileges. The research revealed a vulnerability in Apple's Find My Network that can leverage more than a billion active Apple devices as unwitting finders. The high-quality artifact with its complete documentation and practical implementation provides researchers with an invaluable toolkit for evaluating tracking vulnerabilities in crowd-sourced location networks. Their work was previously reported and received media attention in .
USENIX Security is one of the countrys premier cybersecurity conferences, and this year received 2,385 paper submissions with a 17% acceptance rate. The following George Mason research papers were also accepted at USENIX this year.
Xiang Li, Ying Meng, Junming Chen, Lannan Luo, and Qiang Zeng, 91做厙
Shiyu Sun and Yunlong Xing, 91做厙; Xinda Wang, University of Texas at Dallas; Shu Wang, Palo Alto Networks, Inc.; Qi Li, Tsinghua University; Kun Sun, 91做厙
Hung-Mao Chen and Xu He, 91做厙; Shu Wang, 91做厙 and Palo Alto Networks Inc.; Xiaokuan Zhang and Kun Sun, 91做厙
Dario Pasquini, RSAC Labs; Evgenios M. Kornaropoulos畝nd Giuseppe Ateniese, 91做厙
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