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Gene Tsudik
Researcher at University of California, Irvine
Publications - 465
Citations - 32121
Gene Tsudik is an academic researcher from University of California, Irvine. The author has contributed to research in topics: Authentication & The Internet. The author has an hindex of 90, co-authored 448 publications receiving 30539 citations. Previous affiliations of Gene Tsudik include University of California & University of Southern California.
Papers
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Proceedings ArticleDOI
Hummingbird: Privacy at the Time of Twitter
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors assess privacy in today's Twitter-like OSNs and describe an architecture and a trial implementation of a privacy-preserving service called Hummingbird, which is essentially a variant of Twitter that protects tweet contents, hash tags and follower interests from the (potentially) prying eyes of the centralized server.
Proceedings ArticleDOI
A minimalist approach to remote attestation
TL;DR: This paper provides a systematic treatment of Remote Attestation, starting with a precise definition of the desired service and proceeding to its systematic deconstruction into necessary and sufficient properties, which are mapped into a minimal collection of hardware and software components that result in secure remote Attestation.
Journal ArticleDOI
A comparative study of secure device pairing methods
TL;DR: This work presents the first comprehensive comparative evaluation of notable secure device pairing methods, and identifies methods best-suited for a given combination of devices and human abilities.
Posted Content
ANDaNA: Anonymous Named Data Networking Application
TL;DR: ANDaNA as mentioned in this paper is an NDN add-on tool that borrows a number of features from Tor and provides comparable anonymity with a lower relative overhead, as compared to Tor.
Proceedings ArticleDOI
Reducing the cost of security in link-state routing
TL;DR: The cost of security is examined and two techniques for efficient and secure processing of link state updates are presented, geared towards a relatively stable internetwork environment while the second is designed with a more volatile environment in mind.