"Five Papers by CSE Researchers Presented at USENIX Security 2023"

Computer Science and Engineering (CSE) researchers from the University of Michigan are presenting their papers at the 32nd USENIX Security Symposium. The university has compiled a list of papers authored by the CSE researchers being presented at the event. The papers cover various topics on improving security and privacy measures in modern computing systems. The topics include Virtual Private Network (VPN) performance, autonomous vehicle security, face obfuscation systems, mobile device "shoulder surfing," and more. One of the papers being presented is titled "Eye-Shield: Real-Time Protection of Mobile Device Screen Information from Shoulder Surfing." People often use their mobile devices in public settings, making them vulnerable to a simple yet effective attack known as shoulder surfing. A shoulder surfing attack happens when someone near a mobile device user looks at the user's device, potentially noting passcodes, PINs, browsing behavior, or other personal information. The paper proposes Eye-Shield, a method for preventing shoulder surfers from accessing/stealing sensitive information displayed on-screen. Eye-Shield is designed to protect all forms of on-screen information without significantly impeding users' mobile device interactions. This article continues to discuss the CSE researchers' papers being presented at the 32nd USENIX Security Symposium.

The University of Michigan reports "Five Papers by CSE Researchers Presented at USENIX Security 2023"

Submitted by Anonymous on