Entry Du:2008:SSI from jeric.bib

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BibTeX entry

@Article{Du:2008:SSI,
  author =       "Wenliang Du and Ronghua Wang",
  title =        "{SEED}: a Suite of Instructional Laboratories for
                 Computer Security Education",
  journal =      j-JERIC,
  volume =       "8",
  number =       "1",
  pages =        "3:1--3:??",
  month =        mar,
  year =         "2008",
  CODEN =        "????",
  DOI =          "https://doi.org/10.1145/1348713.1348716",
  ISSN =         "1531-4278",
  bibdate =      "Fri Jun 20 10:13:08 MDT 2008",
  bibsource =    "http://www.acm.org/pubs/contents/journals/jeric/;
                 http://www.math.utah.edu/pub/tex/bib/jeric.bib",
  abstract =     "The security and assurance of our computing
                 infrastructure has become a national priority. To
                 address this priority, higher education has gradually
                 incorporated the principles of computer and information
                 security into the mainstream undergraduate and graduate
                 computer science curricula. To achieve effective
                 education, learning security principles must be
                 grounded in experience. This calls for effective
                 laboratory exercises (or course projects). Although a
                 number of laboratories have been designed for security
                 education, they only cover a small portion of the
                 fundamental security principles. Moreover, their
                 underlying lab environments are different, making
                 integration of these laboratories infeasible for a
                 semester-long course. Currently, security laboratories
                 that can be widely adopted are still lacking, and they
                 are in great demand in security education.\par

                 We have developed a novel laboratory environment
                 (referred to as SEED). The SEED environment consists of
                 Minix, an instructional operating system (OS), and
                 Linux, a production OS; it takes advantage of the
                 simplicity of Minix and the completeness of Linux, and
                 provides a unified platform to support a rich set of
                 laboratories for computer security education. Based on
                 the SEED environment, we have developed a list of
                 laboratories that cover a wide spectrum of security
                 principles. These labs provide opportunities for
                 students to develop essential skills for secure
                 computing practice. We have been using these labs in
                 our courses during the last five years. This article
                 presents our SEED environment, laboratories, and
                 evaluation results.",
  acknowledgement = ack-nhfb,
  articleno =    "3",
  keywords =     "education; instructional laboratories; security",
}

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