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 Applications of Students from the New EU Countries to UK Universities Have Shot up by Almost 140 Percent
more »
Convergys Corporation, the global leader in integrated billing, employee care, and customer care services, announced that it has signed a contract to license its Infinys(TM) software to Romania Telecom
more »
Welcome to seminar "Education and Training for the Knowledge Economy" on 29 July, 2004!
more »
With television cameramen hovering, Qualcomm chief executive Irwin Jacobs sat in the front row of coach and made one of the first legal cell phone calls from a commercial jetliner
more »
The rights and wrongs of using radio frequency identification (RFID) tags on humans have been debated since the tracking tags reached the technological mainstream
more »
Super telescope aims to unlock clues to life beyond earth
more »
France's education minister has vowed that a ban on Islamic headscarves in state schools will be enforced when the new term starts in September
more »
For the
first time the Diplomas of Master Degree in Information and Communication were
handed to Vilnius University International Center of Knowledge Economy and
Knowledge Management seniors on the 15 of June at 10
o’clock at the
St.
Johns’
Church.
more »
The Chess school of Anatolin Karpov has been open
more »
Russia and Turkmenistan begin talks to divide Caspian Sea bottom in Ashgabat
more »