Title :
Higher-ed networks begin circling the wagons [college network security]
fDate :
6/27/1905 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
Ever since peer-to-peer file-sharing programs became popular in the late 1990s, college campuses have been perceived as a Wild West of profligate bandwidth use and lax security - a perfect digital incubator for viruses, spyware, and illegal downloads of copyright-protected material. Yet little hard data is available to help campus officials or their prospective government and enterprise partners pinpoint the scope and origins of possible attacks on college networks. To address this lack, a team of networking researchers is undertaking the first distributed intrusion-detection project to compile network traffic data specific to the higher-education sector.
Keywords :
educational computing; peer-to-peer computing; security of data; college campuses; college networks; copyright protected material; distributed intrusion-detection project; higher-education sector; illegal downloads; network traffic data; peer-to-peer file-sharing programs; Bandwidth; Computer viruses; Data security; Educational institutions; Educational programs; Government; Information security; Intrusion detection; Peer to peer computing; Telecommunication traffic; higher education; network security;
Journal_Title :
Distributed Systems Online, IEEE
DOI :
10.1109/MDSO.2005.64