Company working with universities to create courses that teach students to write secure code
Published:
22 March 2003 y., Saturday
Microsoft is working with a number of universities in several countries to set up courses that teach students how to write secure code, the company said Friday. The University of Leeds in England is the first to announce such a course.
As part of an 11 week module that will start in January next year, third-year undergraduates at the University of Leeds will be asked to hack into software and fix any security bugs they find, Nick Efford, senior teaching fellow at the School of Computing, University of Leeds, said.
Students will be confronted with security vulnerabilities such as buffer overruns and taught how to prevent those when writing software. That focus on security in software engineering and the hands-on experience makes the course different from most existing security classes, which typically focus on network security and cryptography, according to Efford.
Microsoft is partly funding Efford's fellowship and is helping with the curriculum's content. The Redmond, Washington, software maker is in talks with other universities on similar programs, Stuart Okin, chief security officer for Microsoft in the U.K. said.
Šaltinis:
infoworld.com
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.
The most popular articles
The European Commission announced today the award of three of the six contracts for the procurement of Galileo’s initial operational capability.
more »
The British survey team was dropped onto the floating ice of the Arctic Ocean to begin a three month trek to the North Pole.
more »
There was embarrassment for NASA on Tuesday following the loss of a 278 million dollar climate satellite.
more »
The nearly complete skeleton of a massive Colombian mammoth has been dug out of a construction site in downtown Los Angeles.
more »
A solar power station on the French island of Réunion and a centre for aeronautical research in the Belgian region of Wallonia fetched two of the EU’s annual awards for best regional projects.
more »
Archaeologists on the side of the Step Pyramid of Saqqara found an Egyptian sarcophagus more than two and a half thousand years old.
more »
Many children living in slums in the eastern Indian state Jharkhand are so poor that they have pick through garbage to earn extra money for their families.
more »
Only 1% of Europe is untouched by humans and everything must be done to preserve what is still out there for the future.
more »
Europe is catching up with its main economic rivals – the US and Japan – in innovation performance, according to an EU study.
more »
The modern world puts emphasis on better use of knowledge and rapid innovation.
more »
The city and university have been at a stalemate over the Venezuela Highway construction project which was started last year and is slated to go right through the middle of the school.
more »