Len Sassaman
About me
I am a doctoral student in Electrical Engineering. My advisors are
Bart Preneel and
David Chaum.
Research Interests
My research is centered around the topic of privacy enhancing
technologies. In particular, I am focused on both attacking and
defending anonymous communication systems, exploring the applicability
of information-theoretic secure systems for privacy solutions, and
designing protocols which satisfy the specific needs of the use case for
which they are applied. I have a very strong interest in the real-world
applicability of my work; while some of what I do is pure theory, I have
always held the believe that if a system cannot be implemented easily or
be easily understood by the implementors, its utility is limited.
Similarly, I believe that usability is a security concern; systems that
do not pay close attention to the human interaction factors involved
risk failing to provide security by failing to attract users. Thus, I
follow closely the fields of HCI and Applied Programming as well as
Information Theory, Cryptography, and Anonymity.
Selected Publications
-
How to Bypass Two Anonymity Revocation Schemes.
George Danezis and Len Sassaman. In Proceedings of the
Privacy Enhancing Technologies Symposium 2008 (PETS
2008), N. Borisov, and I. Goldberg (eds.), Springer-Verlag, 15
pages, 2008.
-
Freezing More Than Bits: Chilling Effects of the OLPC XO Security Model.
Meredith L. Patterson, Len Sassaman, and David Chaum. In
Proceedings of Usability,
Psychology, and Security 2008 (UPSEC 2008),
E. Churchill, and R. Dhamija (eds.), USENIX, 5 pages, 2008.
-
Subliminal Channels in the Private Information Retrieval
Protocols.
Meredith L. Patterson and Len Sassaman. In Proceedings of the 28th
Symposium on Information Theory in the Benelux (WIC
2007), R. Veldhuis, H. Cronie, and F. Hoeksema (eds.), 8
pages, 2007.
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The Pynchon Gate: A Secure Method of Pseudonymous Mail Retrieval.
Len Sassaman, Bram Cohen, and Nick Mathewson. In Proceedings of the
Workshop on Privacy in the Electronic Society 2005 (WPES
2005), S. De Capitani di Vimercati, and R. Dingledine (eds.), ACM, 9 pages, 2005.
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Comparison between Two Practical Mix Designs. Claudia
Díaz, Len Sassaman and Evelyne Dewitte. In Proceedings of
the 9th European Symposium on Research in Computer Security (ESORICS'04), P. Samarati et al.
(eds.), Springer LNCS 3193, pp. 141-159, 2004.
-
Heartbeat Traffic to Counter $(n-1)$ Attacks:
Red-Green-Black Mixes.
George Danezis and Len Sassaman. In Proceedings of the
Workshop on Privacy in the Electronic Society 2003 (WPES
2003), P. Samarati, and P. F. Syverson (eds.), ACM, 5
pages, 2003.
Please see my complete
publication list for the full list of papers I have authored or
co-authored.
Here is much more comprehensive list of my academic
activities, including speaking engagements, publications, and conferences attended.
Conference Affiliations
Program committee member for ShmooCon 2010
Program committee member for 10th Privacy Enhancing Technologies Symposium
Program committee member for 2009 IEEE International Conference on Privacy, Security, Risk and Trust (PASSAT-09)
Program committee member for IEEE Workshop on Web Privacy and Trust (WPT 2009)
Program committee co-chair for CodeCon 2009
Program committee member for 9th Privacy Enhancing Technologies Symposium
Program committee member for Financial Cryptography and Data Security '09
External reviewer for CCS 2008
Program co-chair for HotPETS 2008
External reviewer for 8th Privacy Enhancing Technologies Symposium
Program committee member for NDSS Symposium 2008
External reviewer for CCS 2007
External reviewer for WPES 2003
Program committee member and general chair for CodeCon 2002,
CodeCon 2003, and
CodeCon 2004
Program committee chair for CodeCon 2005 and
CodeCon 2006
Professional Organizations
Researcher at COSIC;
founding member of the Privacy Group.
Member, The Shmoo Group (Inducted 2000)
Advisor, Scientific Advisory Board, The Lifeboat Foundation. (Joined 2009)
Member, International Association for Cryptologic Research (Joined 2005)
Member, Werkgemeenschap voor Informatie en Communicatietheorie
(Joined 2007)
Member, Association for Computing Machinery (Joined 2008)
Member, IEEE Student Branch Leuven (Joined 2008)
Member, Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics (Joined 2009)
Member, Electronic Frontier Foundation (Joined 2001)
Member, The Internet Society, Belgium Chapter (Joined 2009)
Member, The Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) (Joined 1998)
Observer, The San Francisco PostgreSQL User Group
(Joined 2006)
Other Projects
- Mixmaster is a mix-net implementation
with widespread deployment and over ten years of development and use.
- The The Pynchon Gate is a information-theoretic PIR-based pseudonymity
system designed to obviate the need for reply-block based nym-servers.
- CodeCon is a conference I co-founded with Bram Cohen, aimed at attracting
developers of active, highly practical projects with working code.
- Firekeeper is a browser-level intrusion detection system using Snort rules to detect and block browser-based attacks. This project was selected for the 2006 Google Summer of Code and sponsored by The Shmoo Group, and I served as mentor for its author, Jan Wrobel, for the duration of the Summer of Code program.
- Osogato, Inc. is a startup database software company, whose flagship product OBELisQ integrates fuzzy data mining into the standard relational database model. I am an advisor to the company.
- DIYBIO/Biohacking is a hobby I enjoy, with my wife Meredith.