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J. Alex Halderman

J. Alex Halderman (born c. January 1981) is professor of computer science and engineering at the University of Michigan, where he is also director of the Center for Computer Security & Society. Halderman's research focuses on computer security and privacy, with an emphasis on problems that broadly impact society and public policy.

J. Alex Halderman
Bornc. January 1981 (age 43)
NationalityAmerican
Alma materPrinceton University
Known for2016 United States presidential election recounts
AwardsSloan Research Fellowship, Pwnie Award
Scientific career
FieldsComputer science
InstitutionsUniversity of Michigan
Doctoral advisorEdward Felten
WebsiteJ. Alex Halderman homepage

Education edit

Halderman was awarded the A.B. summa cum laude in June 2003, the M.A. in June 2005, and the Ph.D. in June 2009, all in Computer Science from Princeton University.[1]

Academic career edit

As a student at Princeton, Halderman played a significant role in exposing flaws in digital rights management (DRM) software used on compact discs. In 2004, he discovered that a DRM system called MediaMax CD-3 could be bypassed simply by holding down the shift key while inserting a CD.[citation needed] The company behind the system briefly threatened him with a $10 million lawsuit, landing him on the front page of USA Today.[2] Later, in 2005, he helped show that a DRM system called Extended Copy Protection functioned identically to a rootkit and weakened the security of computers in which audio CDs were played.[citation needed] The ensuing Sony BMG copy protection rootkit scandal led to the recall of millions of CDs, class action lawsuits, and enforcement action by the U.S. Federal Trade Commission.[citation needed]

In 2008, Halderman led the team that discovered the cold boot attack against disk encryption, which allows an attacker with physical access to a computer device to extract encryption keys or other secrets from its memory. The technique, which was initially effective against nearly every full-disk encryption product on the market, exploits DRAM data remanence to retrieve memory contents even after the device has been briefly powered off.[3] One version of the technique involves cooling DRAM modules with freeze spray to slow data decay, then removing them from the computer and reading them in an external device. It has become an important part of computer forensics practice and has also inspired a wide variety of defensive research, such as leakage-resilient cryptography and hardware implementations of encrypted RAM. For their work developing the attack, Halderman and his coauthors received the Pwnie Award for Most Innovative Research and the Best Student Paper Award from the USENIX Security Symposium.

At the University of Michigan, Halderman and coauthors performed some of the first comprehensive studies of Internet censorship in China[4] and in Iran,[5] and of underground "street networks" in Cuba.[6] In 2009, he led a team that uncovered security problems and copyright infringement in client-side censorship software mandated by the Chinese government.[7] The findings helped catalyze popular protest against the program, leading China to reverse its policy requiring its installation on new PCs. In 2011, Halderman and his students invented Telex, a new approach to circumventing Internet censorship, partially by placing anticensorship technology into core network infrastructure outside the censoring country. With support from the United States Department of State, which called the technique a "generational jump forward" in censorship resistance,[8] Halderman led a multi-institutional collaboration that further developed the technology and deployed it at ISP-scale under the name Refraction Networking.[9] In 2015, United States Ambassador to the United Nations Samantha Power brought him to New York to demonstrate the technology at a meeting alongside the General Assembly.[8]

In 2012, Halderman and coauthors discovered serious flaws in random number generators that weakened the public-key cryptography used for HTTPS and SSH servers in millions of Internet of things devices. They disclosed vulnerabilities to 60 device manufacturers and spurred changes to the Linux kernel.[10] Their work received the Best Paper Award at the USENIX Security Symposium and was named one of the notable computing articles of the year by ACM Computing Reviews.[11] Halderman played a significant role in fixing several major vulnerabilities in the TLS protocol. He was a co-discoverer of the Logjam[12] and DROWN[13] attacks, and conducted the first impact assessment of the FREAK attack.[14] The three flaws compromised the security of tens of millions of HTTPS websites and resulted in changes to HTTPS server software, web browsers, and the TLS protocol. Since they worked by exploiting remnants of ways in which older versions of the protocol had been deliberately weakened due to 1990s-era restrictions on the export of cryptography from the United States,[15] they carried lessons for the ongoing public policy debate about cryptographic back doors for law enforcement.[16]

Halderman's Logjam work also provided a plausible explanation for a major question raised by the Edward Snowden revelations: how the National Security Agency could be decoding large volumes of encrypted network traffic. By extrapolating their results to the resources of a major government, the researchers concluded that nation-state attackers could plausibly break 1,024-bit Diffie-Hellman key exchange using a purpose-built supercomputer.[17] For a cost on the order of a hundred million dollars, an intelligence agency could break the cryptography used by about two-thirds of all virtual private networks.[18] Snowden publicly responded that he shared the researchers suspicions and blamed the U.S. government for failing to close a vulnerability that left so many people at risk.[19] The work received the 2015 Pwnie Award for Most Innovative Research and was named Best Paper at the ACM Conference on Computer and Communications Security.

In 2013, Halderman and his graduate students created ZMap, a free and open-source security scanning tool designed for information security research.[20] By making efficient use of network bandwidth, ZMap can scan the Internet's entire IPv4 address space in under an hour, allowing researchers to quantify vulnerable systems, track the adoption of security patches, and even measure the impact of natural disasters that disrupt Internet access.[21] Halderman and collaborators used it to track the OpenSSL Heartbleed vulnerability[22] and raised the global rate of patching by 50% by warning the operators of unpatched web servers.[23] Their work won the Best Paper award at the ACM Internet Measurement Conference. In partnership with Google, Halderman's research group used ZMap to study the security of email delivery,[24] highlighting seven countries where more than 20% of inbound Gmail messages arrived unencrypted due to network attackers.[25] To mitigate the problem, Gmail added an indicator to let users know when they receive a message that wasn't delivered using encryption, resulting in a 25% increase in inbound messages sent over an encrypted connection.[26] Halderman and his collaborators were recognized with the 2015 IRTF Applied Networking Research Prize.

In order to accelerate the adoption of encryption by web servers, Halderman in 2012 partnered with Mozilla and the Electronic Frontier Foundation to found the Let's Encrypt HTTPS certificate authority. Let's Encrypt provides HTTPS certificates at no cost through an automated protocol, significantly lowering the complexity of setting up and maintaining TLS encryption. Since its launch in 2016, Let's Encrypt has grown to protecting more than 150 million web sites.[27] Halderman and his students laid the foundation for the IETF-standard protocol that clients use to interface with the CA, the Automated Certificate Management Environment.[28] He sits on the board of directors of the Internet Security Research Group, the non-profit that operates Let's Encrypt.[29] He is also a co-founder and chief scientist of Censys,[30] a network security company that he says aims to "change the way security works by making it more quantitative, more precise, and more accurate."[31]

In 2015, Halderman was part of a team of proponents that included Steven M. Bellovin, Matt Blaze, Nadia Heninger, and Andrea M. Matwyshyn who successfully proposed a security research exemption to Section 1201 of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act.[32]

Halderman was awarded a Sloan Research Fellowship in 2015 by the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation, and in 2019 he was named an Andrew Carnegie Fellow by the Carnegie Corporation of New York.[33] He was profiled in the November 2016 issue of Playboy.[8]

Electronic voting edit

After the 2016 United States presidential election, computer scientists, including Halderman, urged the Clinton campaign to request an election recount in Wisconsin, Michigan, and Pennsylvania (three swing states where Trump had won narrowly, while Clinton won New Hampshire and Maine narrowly) for the purpose of excluding the possibility that the hacking of electronic voting machines had influenced the recorded outcome.[34][35][36]

On June 21, 2017, Halderman testified before the United States Senate Select Committee on Intelligence.[37][38][39] The hearing, titled "Russian Interference in the 2016 U.S. Election", focused on the federal government's role in safeguarding U.S. elections from outside interference. Halderman discussed his own research in computer science and cybersecurity. He discussed one instance where he tampered with a voting machine and demonstrated the ability to change the outcome of an election. He also made three policy recommendations to safeguard U.S. elections: upgrading and replacing obsolete and vulnerable voting machines; consistently and routinely checking that American elections results are accurate; and applying cybersecurity best practices to the design of voting equipment and the management of elections. Halderman fielded questions from the Senators about his research and policy recommendations. At the end of the hearing, Chairman Burr praised Halderman for his work and noted how important his research is.[citation needed]

Following the 2020 United States presidential election, Halderman stated that a software glitch during the unofficial vote tally was not caused by fraud, but rather by human error,[40] and said the conspiracy theory that a supercomputer was used to switch votes from Trump to Biden was "nonsense".[41]

His expert witness report on voting machine vulnerabilities was filed in a Georgia case under seal, but is sought by litigants in another case and an election official in Louisiana.[42]

In 2022, CISA issued the advisory "Vulnerabilities Affecting Dominion Voting Systems ImageCast X" based on research by Halderman.[43]

References edit

  1. ^ "J. Alex Halderman". jhalderm.com. Retrieved 2022-05-08.
  2. ^ Noden, Merrell (2006-03-22). "Who's Afraid of Alex Halderman '03?". Princeton Alumni Weekly. Retrieved 2019-06-09.
  3. ^ Halderman, J. Alex; Schoen, Seth D.; Heninger, Nadia; Clarkson, William; Paul, William; Calandrino, Joseph A.; Feldman, Ariel J.; Appelbaum, Jacob; Felten, Edward W. (2009). "Lest we remember: cold-boot attacks on encryption keys" (PDF). Communications of the ACM. 52 (5): 91–98. doi:10.1145/1506409.1506429. ISSN 0001-0782. S2CID 7770695.
  4. ^ Xu, Xueyang; Mao, Z. Morley; Halderman, J. Alex (2011). "Internet Censorship in China: Where Does the Filtering Occur?" (PDF). Passive and Active Measurement. Lecture Notes in Computer Science. Springer. 6579: 133–142. Bibcode:2011LNCS.6579..133X. doi:10.1007/978-3-642-19260-9_14. ISBN 978-3-642-19259-3.
  5. ^ Aryan, Simurgh; Aryan, Homa; Halderman, J. Alex (2013). "Internet Censorship in Iran: A First Look" (PDF). Third USENIX Workshop on Free and Open Communications on the Internet (FOCI).
  6. ^ Pujol, Eduardo; Scott, Will; Wustrow, Eric; Halderman, J. Alex (2017). "Initial Measurements of the Cuban Street Network" (PDF). ACM Internet Measurement Conference.
  7. ^ Wolchok, Scott; Yao, Randy; Halderman, J. Alex (2009-06-18). "Analysis of the Green Dam Censorware System". Retrieved 2019-06-09.
  8. ^ a b c Friess, Steve (29 September 2016). . Playboy. Archived from the original on 25 November 2016. Retrieved 24 November 2016.
  9. ^ Frolov, Sergey; Douglas, Fred; Scott, Will; McDonald, Allison; VanderSloot, Benjamin; Hynes, Rod; Kruger, Adam; Kallitsis, Michalis; Robinson, David G.; Borisov, Nikita; Halderman, J. Alex; Wustrow, Eric (2017). "An ISP-Scale Deployment of TapDance" (PDF). 7th USENIX Workshop on Free and Open Communications on the Internet.
  10. ^ Heninger, Nadia; Durumeric, Zakir; Wustrow, Eric; Halderman, J. Alex (2012). "Mining Your Ps and Qs: Detection of Widespread Weak Keys in Network Devices" (PDF). 21st USENIX Security Symposium.
  11. ^ Condon, Angela. "Notable Computing Books and Articles of 2012". ACM Computing Reviews.
  12. ^ Adrian, David; Bhargavan, Karthikeyan; Durumeric, Zakir; Gaudry, Pierrick; Green, Matthew; Halderman, J. Alex; Heninger, Nadia; Springall, Drew; Thomé, Emmanuel; Valenta, Luke; VanderSloot, Benjamin; Wustrow, Eric; Zanella-Béguelin, Santiago; Zimmermann, Paul (2019). "Imperfect Forward Secrecy: How Diffie-Hellman Fails in Practice" (PDF). Communications of the ACM. 61 (1): 106–114. doi:10.1145/3292035. S2CID 56894427.
  13. ^ Aviram, Nimrod; Schinzel, Sebastian; Somorovsky, Juraj; Heninger, Nadia; Dankel, Maik; Steube, Jens; Valenta, Luke; Adrian, David; Halderman, J. Alex; Dukhovni, Viktor; Käsper, Emilia; Cohney, Shaanan; Engels, Susanne; Paar, Christof; Shavitt, Yuval (2016). "DROWN: Breaking TLS using SSLv2" (PDF). 25th USENIX Security Symposium.
  14. ^ "The FREAK Attack". 2015-03-03. Retrieved 2019-06-10.
  15. ^ "What factors contributed to DROWN?". The DROWN Attack. 2016.
  16. ^ Goodin, Dan (2016-03-01). "More than 11 million HTTPS websites imperiled by new decryption attack". Ars Technica. Retrieved 2019-06-10.
  17. ^ Milgrom, Randy (2017). "Courage to Resist: The High-Stakes Adventures of J. Alex Halderman". The Michigan Engineer.
  18. ^ Halderman, J. Alex; Heninger, Nadia (2015-10-14). "How is NSA breaking so much crypto?". Freedom-to-Tinker. Retrieved 2019-06-10.
  19. ^ Guthrie Weissman, Cale (2015-05-21). "Edward Snowden weighs in on the huge internet vulnerability that could have helped the US spy on citizens". Business Insider. Retrieved 2019-06-10.
  20. ^ Durumeric, Zakir; Wustrow, Eric; Halderman, J. Alex (2013). "ZMap: Fast Internet-Wide Scanning and its Security Applications" (PDF). 22nd USENIX Security Symposium.
  21. ^ Lee, Timothy B. (2013-08-13). "Here's what you find when you scan the entire Internet in an hour". The Washington Post. Retrieved 2019-06-11.
  22. ^ Durumeric, Zakir; Li, Frank; Kasten, James; Amann, Johanna; Beekman, Jethro; Payer, Mathias; Weaver, Nicolas; Adrian, David; Paxson, Vern; Bailey, Michael; Halderman, J. Alex (2014). "The Matter of Heartbleed". Proceedings of the 2014 Conference on Internet Measurement Conference. pp. 475–488. doi:10.1145/2663716.2663755. ISBN 9781450332132. S2CID 142767.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: date and year (link)
  23. ^ Gallagher, Sean (2014-04-10). "Researchers find thousands of potential targets for Heartbleed OpenSSL bug". Ars Technica. Retrieved 2019-06-10.
  24. ^ Durumeric, Zakir; Adrian, David; Mirian, Ariana; Kasten, James; Bursztein, Elie; Lidzborski, Nicholas; Thomas, Kurt; Eranti, Vijay; Bailey, Michael; Halderman, J. Alex (2015). "Neither Snow nor Rain nor MITM: An Empirical Analysis of Email Delivery Security". 15th ACM Internet Measurement Conference.
  25. ^ Bursztein, Elie; Lidzborski, Nicolas (2015-11-12). "New Research: Encouraging trends and emerging threats in email security". Google Security Blog. Retrieved 2019-06-11.
  26. ^ Lidzborski, Nicolas; Pevarnek, Jonathan (2016-03-24). "More Encryption, More Notifications, More Email Security". Google Security Blog. Retrieved 2019-06-11.
  27. ^ Aas, Josh (2018-12-31). "Looking Forward to 2019". Let's Encrypt Blog. Retrieved 2019-06-11.
  28. ^ Barnes, R.; Hoffman-Andrews, J.; McCarney, D.; Kasten, J. (2019-03-12). Automatic Certificate Management Environment (ACME). IETF. doi:10.17487/RFC8555. RFC 8555. Retrieved 2019-03-13.
  29. ^ "About Internet Security Research Group". Internet Security Research Group. Retrieved 2019-06-11.
  30. ^ "About Us - Censys". Retrieved 2019-06-09.
  31. ^ "2018 Tech Transfer Annual Report" (PDF). University of Michigan. 2019. Retrieved 2019-06-10.
  32. ^ "Section 1201 Rulemaking: Sixth Triennial Proceeding to Determine Exemptions to the Prohibition on Circumvention" (PDF).
  33. ^ "Two U-M professors awarded Carnegie Fellowships". Michigan News. 2019-04-23. Retrieved 2019-06-09.
  34. ^ Dan Merica (23 November 2016). "Computer scientists to Clinton campaign: Challenge election results". CNN. Retrieved 2016-11-23.
  35. ^ Gabriel, Trip; Sanger, David E. (2016-11-23). "Hillary Clinton Supporters Call for Vote Recount in Battleground States". The New York Times. Retrieved 2017-06-26.
  36. ^ Halderman, J. Alex (2016-11-24). "Want to Know if the Election was Hacked? Look at the Ballots". Medium. Retrieved 2016-11-24.
  37. ^ Naylor, Brian (2017-06-21). "U.S. Elections Systems Vulnerable, Lawmakers Told In Dueling Hearings". National Public Radio. Retrieved 2017-06-26. My conclusion is that our highly computerized election infrastructure is vulnerable to sabotage, and even to cyberattacks that could change votes. These realities risk making our election results more difficult for the American people to trust. I know America's voting machines are vulnerable because my colleagues and I have hacked them.
  38. ^ "Hearings | Intelligence Committee". U.S. Senate. Retrieved 2017-06-26.
  39. ^ "Expert Testimony by J. Alex Halderman" (PDF). U.S. Senate. 2017-06-21. Retrieved 2017-06-26.
  40. ^ "US election fact check: The voting dead?". November 10, 2020. Retrieved December 4, 2020.
  41. ^ Fichera, Angelo; Spencer, Saranac (November 13, 2020). "Bogus Theory Claims Supercomputer Switched Votes in Election". Retrieved December 4, 2020. Likewise, J. Alex Halderman, a professor of computer science and engineering at the University of Michigan, told us the conspiracy theory is "nonsense."
  42. ^ Kate Brumback. Associated Press. (January 13, 2022) "Fox News, Others Seek Access to Report on Voting Machines". USNews website Retrieved March 12, 2022.
  43. ^ "Vulnerabilities Affecting Dominion Voting Systems ImageCast X | CISA". www.cisa.gov. 3 June 2022.

External links edit

  • J. Alex Halderman homepage

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template message J Alex Halderman born c January 1981 is professor of computer science and engineering at the University of Michigan where he is also director of the Center for Computer Security amp Society Halderman s research focuses on computer security and privacy with an emphasis on problems that broadly impact society and public policy J Alex HaldermanBornc January 1981 age 43 Pennsylvania United StatesNationalityAmericanAlma materPrinceton UniversityKnown for2016 United States presidential election recountsAwardsSloan Research Fellowship Pwnie AwardScientific careerFieldsComputer scienceInstitutionsUniversity of MichiganDoctoral advisorEdward FeltenWebsiteJ Alex Halderman homepage Contents 1 Education 2 Academic career 3 Electronic voting 4 References 5 External linksEducation editHalderman was awarded the A B summa cum laude in June 2003 the M A in June 2005 and the Ph D in June 2009 all in Computer Science from Princeton University 1 Academic career editAs a student at Princeton Halderman played a significant role in exposing flaws in digital rights management DRM software used on compact discs In 2004 he discovered that a DRM system called MediaMax CD 3 could be bypassed simply by holding down the shift key while inserting a CD citation needed The company behind the system briefly threatened him with a 10 million lawsuit landing him on the front page of USA Today 2 Later in 2005 he helped show that a DRM system called Extended Copy Protection functioned identically to a rootkit and weakened the security of computers in which audio CDs were played citation needed The ensuing Sony BMG copy protection rootkit scandal led to the recall of millions of CDs class action lawsuits and enforcement action by the U S Federal Trade Commission citation needed In 2008 Halderman led the team that discovered the cold boot attack against disk encryption which allows an attacker with physical access to a computer device to extract encryption keys or other secrets from its memory The technique which was initially effective against nearly every full disk encryption product on the market exploits DRAM data remanence to retrieve memory contents even after the device has been briefly powered off 3 One version of the technique involves cooling DRAM modules with freeze spray to slow data decay then removing them from the computer and reading them in an external device It has become an important part of computer forensics practice and has also inspired a wide variety of defensive research such as leakage resilient cryptography and hardware implementations of encrypted RAM For their work developing the attack Halderman and his coauthors received the Pwnie Award for Most Innovative Research and the Best Student Paper Award from the USENIX Security Symposium At the University of Michigan Halderman and coauthors performed some of the first comprehensive studies of Internet censorship in China 4 and in Iran 5 and of underground street networks in Cuba 6 In 2009 he led a team that uncovered security problems and copyright infringement in client side censorship software mandated by the Chinese government 7 The findings helped catalyze popular protest against the program leading China to reverse its policy requiring its installation on new PCs In 2011 Halderman and his students invented Telex a new approach to circumventing Internet censorship partially by placing anticensorship technology into core network infrastructure outside the censoring country With support from the United States Department of State which called the technique a generational jump forward in censorship resistance 8 Halderman led a multi institutional collaboration that further developed the technology and deployed it at ISP scale under the name Refraction Networking 9 In 2015 United States Ambassador to the United Nations Samantha Power brought him to New York to demonstrate the technology at a meeting alongside the General Assembly 8 In 2012 Halderman and coauthors discovered serious flaws in random number generators that weakened the public key cryptography used for HTTPS and SSH servers in millions of Internet of things devices They disclosed vulnerabilities to 60 device manufacturers and spurred changes to the Linux kernel 10 Their work received the Best Paper Award at the USENIX Security Symposium and was named one of the notable computing articles of the year by ACM Computing Reviews 11 Halderman played a significant role in fixing several major vulnerabilities in the TLS protocol He was a co discoverer of the Logjam 12 and DROWN 13 attacks and conducted the first impact assessment of the FREAK attack 14 The three flaws compromised the security of tens of millions of HTTPS websites and resulted in changes to HTTPS server software web browsers and the TLS protocol Since they worked by exploiting remnants of ways in which older versions of the protocol had been deliberately weakened due to 1990s era restrictions on the export of cryptography from the United States 15 they carried lessons for the ongoing public policy debate about cryptographic back doors for law enforcement 16 Halderman s Logjam work also provided a plausible explanation for a major question raised by the Edward Snowden revelations how the National Security Agency could be decoding large volumes of encrypted network traffic By extrapolating their results to the resources of a major government the researchers concluded that nation state attackers could plausibly break 1 024 bit Diffie Hellman key exchange using a purpose built supercomputer 17 For a cost on the order of a hundred million dollars an intelligence agency could break the cryptography used by about two thirds of all virtual private networks 18 Snowden publicly responded that he shared the researchers suspicions and blamed the U S government for failing to close a vulnerability that left so many people at risk 19 The work received the 2015 Pwnie Award for Most Innovative Research and was named Best Paper at the ACM Conference on Computer and Communications Security In 2013 Halderman and his graduate students created ZMap a free and open source security scanning tool designed for information security research 20 By making efficient use of network bandwidth ZMap can scan the Internet s entire IPv4 address space in under an hour allowing researchers to quantify vulnerable systems track the adoption of security patches and even measure the impact of natural disasters that disrupt Internet access 21 Halderman and collaborators used it to track the OpenSSL Heartbleed vulnerability 22 and raised the global rate of patching by 50 by warning the operators of unpatched web servers 23 Their work won the Best Paper award at the ACM Internet Measurement Conference In partnership with Google Halderman s research group used ZMap to study the security of email delivery 24 highlighting seven countries where more than 20 of inbound Gmail messages arrived unencrypted due to network attackers 25 To mitigate the problem Gmail added an indicator to let users know when they receive a message that wasn t delivered using encryption resulting in a 25 increase in inbound messages sent over an encrypted connection 26 Halderman and his collaborators were recognized with the 2015 IRTF Applied Networking Research Prize In order to accelerate the adoption of encryption by web servers Halderman in 2012 partnered with Mozilla and the Electronic Frontier Foundation to found the Let s Encrypt HTTPS certificate authority Let s Encrypt provides HTTPS certificates at no cost through an automated protocol significantly lowering the complexity of setting up and maintaining TLS encryption Since its launch in 2016 Let s Encrypt has grown to protecting more than 150 million web sites 27 Halderman and his students laid the foundation for the IETF standard protocol that clients use to interface with the CA the Automated Certificate Management Environment 28 He sits on the board of directors of the Internet Security Research Group the non profit that operates Let s Encrypt 29 He is also a co founder and chief scientist of Censys 30 a network security company that he says aims to change the way security works by making it more quantitative more precise and more accurate 31 In 2015 Halderman was part of a team of proponents that included Steven M Bellovin Matt Blaze Nadia Heninger and Andrea M Matwyshyn who successfully proposed a security research exemption to Section 1201 of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act 32 Halderman was awarded a Sloan Research Fellowship in 2015 by the Alfred P Sloan Foundation and in 2019 he was named an Andrew Carnegie Fellow by the Carnegie Corporation of New York 33 He was profiled in the November 2016 issue of Playboy 8 Electronic voting editAfter the 2016 United States presidential election computer scientists including Halderman urged the Clinton campaign to request an election recount in Wisconsin Michigan and Pennsylvania three swing states where Trump had won narrowly while Clinton won New Hampshire and Maine narrowly for the purpose of excluding the possibility that the hacking of electronic voting machines had influenced the recorded outcome 34 35 36 On June 21 2017 Halderman testified before the United States Senate Select Committee on Intelligence 37 38 39 The hearing titled Russian Interference in the 2016 U S Election focused on the federal government s role in safeguarding U S elections from outside interference Halderman discussed his own research in computer science and cybersecurity He discussed one instance where he tampered with a voting machine and demonstrated the ability to change the outcome of an election He also made three policy recommendations to safeguard U S elections upgrading and replacing obsolete and vulnerable voting machines consistently and routinely checking that American elections results are accurate and applying cybersecurity best practices to the design of voting equipment and the management of elections Halderman fielded questions from the Senators about his research and policy recommendations At the end of the hearing Chairman Burr praised Halderman for his work and noted how important his research is citation needed Following the 2020 United States presidential election Halderman stated that a software glitch during the unofficial vote tally was not caused by fraud but rather by human error 40 and said the conspiracy theory that a supercomputer was used to switch votes from Trump to Biden was nonsense 41 His expert witness report on voting machine vulnerabilities was filed in a Georgia case under seal but is sought by litigants in another case and an election official in Louisiana 42 In 2022 CISA issued the advisory Vulnerabilities Affecting Dominion Voting Systems ImageCast X based on research by Halderman 43 References edit J Alex Halderman jhalderm com Retrieved 2022 05 08 Noden Merrell 2006 03 22 Who s Afraid of Alex Halderman 03 Princeton Alumni Weekly Retrieved 2019 06 09 Halderman J Alex Schoen Seth D Heninger Nadia Clarkson William Paul William Calandrino Joseph A Feldman Ariel J Appelbaum Jacob Felten Edward W 2009 Lest we remember cold boot attacks on encryption keys PDF Communications of the ACM 52 5 91 98 doi 10 1145 1506409 1506429 ISSN 0001 0782 S2CID 7770695 Xu Xueyang Mao Z Morley Halderman J Alex 2011 Internet Censorship in China Where Does the Filtering Occur PDF Passive and Active Measurement Lecture Notes in Computer Science Springer 6579 133 142 Bibcode 2011LNCS 6579 133X doi 10 1007 978 3 642 19260 9 14 ISBN 978 3 642 19259 3 Aryan Simurgh Aryan Homa Halderman J Alex 2013 Internet Censorship in Iran A First Look PDF Third USENIX Workshop on Free and Open Communications on the Internet FOCI Pujol Eduardo Scott Will Wustrow Eric Halderman J Alex 2017 Initial Measurements of the Cuban Street Network PDF ACM Internet Measurement Conference Wolchok Scott Yao Randy Halderman J Alex 2009 06 18 Analysis of the Green Dam Censorware System Retrieved 2019 06 09 a b c Friess Steve 29 September 2016 Technology Will Destroy Democracy Unless This Man Stops It Playboy Archived from the original on 25 November 2016 Retrieved 24 November 2016 Frolov Sergey Douglas Fred Scott Will McDonald Allison VanderSloot Benjamin Hynes Rod Kruger Adam Kallitsis Michalis Robinson David G Borisov Nikita Halderman J Alex Wustrow Eric 2017 An ISP Scale Deployment of TapDance PDF 7th USENIX Workshop on Free and Open Communications on the Internet Heninger Nadia Durumeric Zakir Wustrow Eric Halderman J Alex 2012 Mining Your Ps and Qs Detection of Widespread Weak Keys in Network Devices PDF 21st USENIX Security Symposium Condon Angela Notable Computing Books and Articles of 2012 ACM Computing Reviews Adrian David Bhargavan Karthikeyan Durumeric Zakir Gaudry Pierrick Green Matthew Halderman J Alex Heninger Nadia Springall Drew Thome Emmanuel Valenta Luke VanderSloot Benjamin Wustrow Eric Zanella Beguelin Santiago Zimmermann Paul 2019 Imperfect Forward Secrecy How Diffie Hellman Fails in Practice PDF Communications of the ACM 61 1 106 114 doi 10 1145 3292035 S2CID 56894427 Aviram Nimrod Schinzel Sebastian Somorovsky Juraj Heninger Nadia Dankel Maik Steube Jens Valenta Luke Adrian David Halderman J Alex Dukhovni Viktor Kasper Emilia Cohney Shaanan Engels Susanne Paar Christof Shavitt Yuval 2016 DROWN Breaking TLS using SSLv2 PDF 25th USENIX Security Symposium The FREAK Attack 2015 03 03 Retrieved 2019 06 10 What factors contributed to DROWN The DROWN Attack 2016 Goodin Dan 2016 03 01 More than 11 million HTTPS websites imperiled by new decryption attack Ars Technica Retrieved 2019 06 10 Milgrom Randy 2017 Courage to Resist The High Stakes Adventures of J Alex Halderman The Michigan Engineer Halderman J Alex Heninger Nadia 2015 10 14 How is NSA breaking so much crypto Freedom to Tinker Retrieved 2019 06 10 Guthrie Weissman Cale 2015 05 21 Edward Snowden weighs in on the huge internet vulnerability that could have helped the US spy on citizens Business Insider Retrieved 2019 06 10 Durumeric Zakir Wustrow Eric Halderman J Alex 2013 ZMap Fast Internet Wide Scanning and its Security Applications PDF 22nd USENIX Security Symposium Lee Timothy B 2013 08 13 Here s what you find when you scan the entire Internet in an hour The Washington Post Retrieved 2019 06 11 Durumeric Zakir Li Frank Kasten James Amann Johanna Beekman Jethro Payer Mathias Weaver Nicolas Adrian David Paxson Vern Bailey Michael Halderman J Alex 2014 The Matter of Heartbleed Proceedings of the 2014 Conference on Internet Measurement Conference pp 475 488 doi 10 1145 2663716 2663755 ISBN 9781450332132 S2CID 142767 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint date and year link Gallagher Sean 2014 04 10 Researchers find thousands of potential targets for Heartbleed OpenSSL bug Ars Technica Retrieved 2019 06 10 Durumeric Zakir Adrian David Mirian Ariana Kasten James Bursztein Elie Lidzborski Nicholas Thomas Kurt Eranti Vijay Bailey Michael Halderman J Alex 2015 Neither Snow nor Rain nor MITM An Empirical Analysis of Email Delivery Security 15th ACM Internet Measurement Conference Bursztein Elie Lidzborski Nicolas 2015 11 12 New Research Encouraging trends and emerging threats in email security Google Security Blog Retrieved 2019 06 11 Lidzborski Nicolas Pevarnek Jonathan 2016 03 24 More Encryption More Notifications More Email Security Google Security Blog Retrieved 2019 06 11 Aas Josh 2018 12 31 Looking Forward to 2019 Let s Encrypt Blog Retrieved 2019 06 11 Barnes R Hoffman Andrews J McCarney D Kasten J 2019 03 12 Automatic Certificate Management Environment ACME IETF doi 10 17487 RFC8555 RFC 8555 Retrieved 2019 03 13 About Internet Security Research Group Internet Security Research Group Retrieved 2019 06 11 About Us Censys Retrieved 2019 06 09 2018 Tech Transfer Annual Report PDF University of Michigan 2019 Retrieved 2019 06 10 Section 1201 Rulemaking Sixth Triennial Proceeding to Determine Exemptions to the Prohibition on Circumvention PDF Two U M professors awarded Carnegie Fellowships Michigan News 2019 04 23 Retrieved 2019 06 09 Dan Merica 23 November 2016 Computer scientists to Clinton campaign Challenge election results CNN Retrieved 2016 11 23 Gabriel Trip Sanger David E 2016 11 23 Hillary Clinton Supporters Call for Vote Recount in Battleground States The New York Times Retrieved 2017 06 26 Halderman J Alex 2016 11 24 Want to Know if the Election was Hacked Look at the Ballots Medium Retrieved 2016 11 24 Naylor Brian 2017 06 21 U S Elections Systems Vulnerable Lawmakers Told In Dueling Hearings National Public Radio Retrieved 2017 06 26 My conclusion is that our highly computerized election infrastructure is vulnerable to sabotage and even to cyberattacks that could change votes These realities risk making our election results more difficult for the American people to trust I know America s voting machines are vulnerable because my colleagues and I have hacked them Hearings Intelligence Committee U S Senate Retrieved 2017 06 26 Expert Testimony by J Alex Halderman PDF U S Senate 2017 06 21 Retrieved 2017 06 26 US election fact check The voting dead November 10 2020 Retrieved December 4 2020 Fichera Angelo Spencer Saranac November 13 2020 Bogus Theory Claims Supercomputer Switched Votes in Election Retrieved December 4 2020 Likewise J Alex Halderman a professor of computer science and engineering at the University of Michigan told us the conspiracy theory is nonsense Kate Brumback Associated Press January 13 2022 Fox News Others Seek Access to Report on Voting Machines USNews website Retrieved March 12 2022 Vulnerabilities Affecting Dominion Voting Systems ImageCast X CISA www cisa gov 3 June 2022 External links editJ Alex Halderman homepage Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title J Alex Halderman amp oldid 1198744408, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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