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New Brunswick university hosts hi-tech research hub

New Brunswick university hosts hi-tech research hub

By:  Mari-Len De Guzman  On: 15 Mar 2007 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

The University of New Brunswick (UNB) in Fredericton recently became home to one of the first research facilities in Canada focusing solely on information and network security studies

The technology that results from this study would be capable of building a normal profile of the network, so that any deviation from that profile will be considered as suspicious and possibly anomalous. Ghorbani’s team has also been working on network attack visualization using 3D technology.

“As an attack starts and completes, there are many steps involved. We [want to] visualize that to understand the process of starting an attack and completing an attack, and what scenarios are involved in doing that,” explained Ghorbani.

The research centre’s work in this area aims to develop an algorithm for attack simulation. This will allow a network administrator to run various attack scenarios to determine how an incident in one area of the system affects the rest of the network.

Work is also underway to build a system that will enable automatic discovery and classification of network applications, with very little or no intervention from the administrator. The technology can intelligently detect applications running in the system that are not authorized or part of the infrastructure, and appropriately flag those apps, Ghorbani explained.

Q1 Labs’ Hannigan noted that the areas that have been identified for research are counted as some of the most critical problems facing the enterprise today.

“There’s a lot of information that security systems have to gather and analyze. And then there are some fundamental algorithms that can be applied to that data to try and figure out what’s important and what’s not important; that’s a very complex process,” Hannigan said.

As part of the agreement, Q1 Labs will retain exclusive rights to all intellectual property derived as a result of the centre’s research endeavours. The resulting algorithms will be incorporated into Q1 Lab’s flagship product, QRadar, Hannigan said.

UNB will have research rights to the technology that’s produced as a result of the current study, to further extend research in other areas of network security, said Ghorbani.

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Mari-Len De Guzman Mari-Len De Guzman is a contributor to the International Data Group (IDG) News Service, which publishes global technology stories from bureaus around the world to more than 300 publications in more than 60 countries.

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