-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- What are some of the better colleges/universities to study Computer/Network security at? I know MIT is a good one. Any others that aren't quite so hard to get in to that still offer quality programs? -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: PGP for Personal Privacy 5.0 Charset: noconv iQCVAwUBM9Eu9MF7aWKjtgVVAQGQUAP+O1255PqXzWGixEcku+kOwxhSpiibilg5 GMnV/6KZ1uWLefyWhyclx0S8yogHhbDyaWs3jpJ32MNQk/hbpliotD3r7oJHgmux pCbv71pwBzPU0z1q5qtaBnU3kEuCQtnVVvYobSJWkcrVAnBMxQVIl4Pd8ccHGdmy kKvoKx5Z3YM= =B3mA -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- Nick West http://members.tripod.com/~NWest/index.html
At 2:17 PM -0700 7/19/97, Nick West wrote:
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What are some of the better colleges/universities to study Computer/Network security at? I know MIT is a good one. Any others that aren't quite so hard to get in to that still offer quality programs?
Do you mean for grad school, or for undergrad work? If the former, look for where the papers that interest you are coming from. That is, whom do you want to work with? UC Berkeley is obviously doing interesting work, Purude has some well known folks, and Carnegie-Mellon is in the home city of CERT (maybe not a recommendation...). And Stanford is always a hotbed. At least a dozen other places are doing fine work. If for undergrad work, you of course won't have any exposure to speak of in these areas, save for one or two courses. Maybe. Ask Sameer Parekh why he picked Berkeley over MIT for his undergraduate experience (apparently now on hiatus as he runs his company). --Tim May There's something wrong when I'm a felon under an increasing number of laws. Only one response to the key grabbers is warranted: "Death to Tyrants!" ---------:---------:---------:---------:---------:---------:---------:---- Timothy C. May | Crypto Anarchy: encryption, digital money, tcmay@got.net 408-728-0152 | anonymous networks, digital pseudonyms, zero W.A.S.T.E.: Corralitos, CA | knowledge, reputations, information markets, Higher Power: 2^1398269 | black markets, collapse of governments. "National borders aren't even speed bumps on the information superhighway."
Tim May <tcmay@got.net> writes:
Ask Sameer Parekh why he picked Berkeley over MIT for his undergraduate experience (apparently now on hiatus as he runs his company).
Because the Arab terrorist Sameer "Gas the Kikes" Parekh likes to suck big dicks. There are even more fags at Berkeley/San Francisco than at MIT/Cambridge, and Sameer likes being with his fellow cocksuckers. Where is Cunanan when the cryptographic field needs him? --- Dr.Dimitri Vulis KOTM Brighton Beach Boardwalk BBS, Forest Hills, N.Y.: +1-718-261-2013, 14.4Kbps
Tim May wrote:
At 2:17 PM -0700 7/19/97, Nick West wrote:
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What are some of the better colleges/universities to study Computer/Network security at? I know MIT is a good one. Any others that aren't quite so hard to get in to that still offer quality programs?
Do you mean for grad school, or for undergrad work?
If the former, look for where the papers that interest you are coming from. That is, whom do you want to work with? UC Berkeley is obviously doing interesting work, Purude has some well known folks, and Carnegie-Mellon is in the home city of CERT (maybe not a recommendation...). And Stanford is always a hotbed. At least a dozen other places are doing fine work.
Princeton and the University of Washington are also doing some interesting things, if you're interested in Java security. -- What is appropriate for the master is not appropriate| Tom Weinstein for the novice. You must understand Tao before | tomw@netscape.com transcending structure. -- The Tao of Programming |
On Sat, 19 Jul 1997, Tim May wrote:
If the former, look for where the papers that interest you are coming from. That is, whom do you want to work with? UC Berkeley is obviously doing interesting work, Purude has some well known folks, and Carnegie-Mellon is in the home city of CERT (maybe not a recommendation...). And Stanford is always a hotbed. At least a dozen other places are doing fine work.
You do realize that CERT is run by the Software Engineering Institute, a division/center/something run by Carnegie-Mellon, right? ----------------------------------------------------------------------- Ryan Anderson - <Pug Majere> "Who knows, even the horse might sing" Wayne State University - CULMA "May you live in interesting times.." randerso@ece.eng.wayne.edu Ohio = VYI of the USA PGP Fingerprint - 7E 8E C6 54 96 AC D9 57 E4 F8 AE 9C 10 7E 78 C9 -----------------------------------------------------------------------
Tim May <tcmay@got.net> writes:
At 2:17 PM -0700 7/19/97, Nick West wrote:
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What are some of the better colleges/universities to study Computer/Network security at? I know MIT is a good one. Any others that aren't quite so hard to get in to that still offer quality programs?
Do you mean for grad school, or for undergrad work?
If the former, look for where the papers that interest you are coming from. That is, whom do you want to work with? UC Berkeley is obviously doing interesting work, Purude has some well known folks, and Carnegie-Mellon is in the home city of CERT (maybe not a recommendation...). And Stanford is always a hotbed. At least a dozen other places are doing fine work.
If for undergrad work, you of course won't have any exposure to speak of in these areas, save for one or two courses. Maybe.
CMU does lots of real world crypto stuff, mostly centering around Kerberos. There's some good theory here, too. In addition, NetBill (book-entry bastards) does some crypto. If you were interested in working one of those projects, you could easily do so as an undergrad. There's also one "number theory" class which is basically crypto 101. As for grad work, if you're interested in number theory and such, you could do well here. Otherwise, you might consider somewhere else. Allumnusly yours, Jer BTW, the administration here is a bunch of bloody facists. "standing on top of the world/ never knew how you never could/ never knew why you never could live/ innocent life that everyone did" -Wormhole
participants (6)
-
dlv@bwalk.dm.com -
Jeremiah A Blatz -
Nick West -
Ryan Anderson -
Tim May -
tomw@netscape.com