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Jelena Mirkovic

Researcher at Information Sciences Institute

Publications -  114
Citations -  5086

Jelena Mirkovic is an academic researcher from Information Sciences Institute. The author has contributed to research in topics: Denial-of-service attack & Computer science. The author has an hindex of 28, co-authored 89 publications receiving 4710 citations. Previous affiliations of Jelena Mirkovic include University of California, Los Angeles & University of Southern California.

Papers
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Proceedings ArticleDOI

SENSS Against Volumetric DDoS Attacks

TL;DR: SENSS enables the victim of an attack to request attack monitoring and filtering on demand, and to pay for the services rendered, and it is also very effective in sparse deployment, offering full protection to direct customers of early adopters, and considerable protection to remote victims when deployed strategically.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Building accountability into the future Internet

TL;DR: A future Internet architecture whose security foundations prevent today's major threats - IP spoofing, distributed denial-of-service attacks, distributed scanning and intrusions, and wide-spread worm infections is proposed.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Fine-grained capabilities for flooding DDoS defense using client reputations

TL;DR: This paper proposes the following novel features: reputation-based ticket-granting, fine-grained capabilities, which authorize access to the victim at a specified priority level based on a client's prior behavior, and Destination-based capabilities, granted by the defense located at the victim; this reduces operational cost, and breaks dependence of tickets on routes.
Journal ArticleDOI

Perspectives on the SolarWinds Incident

TL;DR: A significant cybersecurity event has recently been discovered in which malicious actors gained access to the source code for the Orion monitoring and management software made by the company SolarWinds and inserted malware into that source code as mentioned in this paper.
Proceedings Article

Cardinal pill testing of system virtual machines

TL;DR: Cardinal Pill Testing is proposed--a modification of Red Pill Testing that aims to enumerate the differences between a given VM and a physical machine, through carefully designed tests, and sketches a method to hide pills from malware by systematically correcting their outputs in the virtual machine.