2009年大阳城国际娱乐官网信息技术研究院系列学术报告13

Title: Cloud Security with Defense Virtualization and Protected Data Access

Speaker: Professor Kai Hwang, University of Southern California

Time: 3:00pm on Monday, December 07, 2009

Place: Room1-312,FIT Building, Tsinghua University

Organizer: Research Institute of Information Technology, Tsinghua University.

Biography:

Dr. Kai Hwang is a Professor of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science at the Univ. of Southern California (USC). He received the Ph.D. in Electrical Engineering and Computer Science from the Univ. of California, Berkeley. He has published 8 books and over 210 scientific papers in computer architecture, parallel and distributed computing, network security, and Internet applications. He was awarded an IEEE Fellow in 1986 for making significant contributions in computer architecture, digital arithmetic, and parallel processing. He received the 2004 Outstanding Achievement Award from China Computer Federation.

Dr. Hwang is the founding Editor of the Journal of Parallel and Distributed Computing. He has produced 21 Ph.D. students at USC and Purdue. Several of his former students were elevated to IEEE Fellows or IBM Fellow. He is also an EMC endowed Visiting Professor in computer systems and networking at Tsinghua University, Beijing, China. His latest research publications cover e-commerce, P2P networks, reputation systems, grid performance, copyright protection, cloud security, and cloud performance modeling. He has delivered 30 keynote addresses in major IEEE/ACM Conferences and performed advisory and consulting work for IBM, Intel, MIT Lincoln Lab., Academia Sinica, ETL in Japan, and INRIA in France. Contact him atkaihwang@usc.edu.

Abstract:

Gartner Report has ranked virtualization and cloud computing as the top two technologies in 2009. In this talk, Dr. Hwang will assess the role of virtualization technology in protecting cloud resources and datasets used in three Cloud service models, namely the SaaS, PaaS, and IaaS. He presents virtualization techniques to secure clouds and a hierarchical reputation system for data protection in distributed datacenters. Virtual machines enable dynamic cloud resource provisioning and secure the datacenters in web-scale cloud applications. In particular, security and privacy protection in geospatial query processing and cloud service modeling will be assessed. This talk is based on joint research work performed at USC Internet and Cloud Computing Lab in collaboration with the next-generation Internet research group at the Institute of Computing Technology, Chinese Academy of Sciences.