The GREPSEC II Workshop
May 16-17, 2015


The Ste. Claire Hotel
San Jose, Californa

An NSF and CRA-W/CDC supported workshop for women and underrepresented groups interested in computer security research.





(more photos)

The third GREPSEC workshop will be held in May 2017. Watch here for announcements.

One of the great conundrums of computer science is how to establish the security and trustworthiness of computers, the data they hold, and their communications. The field has attracted brilliant innovations, but the constantly changing technology landscape undermines solutions. There are new opportunities for great thinkers to tackle new problems. The first GREPSEC workshop was in 2013, and this second workshop, like the first, is dedicated to attracting beginning researchers and showing them the wide spectrum of areas that need attention.

Computer security is a discipline that began with the need to control shared resources on expensive computing engines and has grown into a field encompassing nearly all computing devices, from heart implants to cell phones to cloud computing. During the workshop leading minds in this field will address graduate students, showing them the range of knowledge and open problems that fall under the umbrella of security and privacy.

The relaxed nature of the workshop will give students time to talk informally with speakers about research opportunities and career paths. Speakers will be invited based on their accomplishments in research and their ability to mentor students from diverse backgrounds.

The workshop is a one-and-a-half-day weekend event in downtown San Jose, just prior to the Security and Privacy Symposium.

US students accepted to the GREPSEC workshop will be eligible for travel grants; we are seeking funding for a few international students. Space is limited and an application is required of all potential attendees. The application instructions are available here.


These organizations have generously contributed to travel funds for students attending GREPSEC:
Google
Microsoft Research
Information Sciences Institute