Introduction to Information Security Spring 2023

Introduction to Information Security is a graduate-level introductory course in information security. It teaches the basic concepts and principles of information security, and the fundamental approaches to secure computers and networks. Main topics include:

Professors
TAs
Face of Aviva Smith
Aviva Smith
Face of Feng Xiao
Feng Xiao
Face of Ishaan Guha
Ishaan Guha
Face of Jakub Jackowiak
Jakub Jackowiak
Face of Jason Kim
Jason Kim
Face of Lisa Nute
Lisa Nute
Face of Meenakshi Manikandaswamy
Meenakshi Manikandaswamy
Face of Pranau Kumar
Pranau Kumar
Face of Shraddha Bhat
Shraddha Bhat
Face of Yuting Tan
Yuting Tan
TA for Policy Students
Face of Sakshee Bapat
Sakshee Bapat
Email gtinfosec-staff@cc.gatech.edu is the mailing list to reach all staff. Please do not email us individually.
Lectures Tuesdays and Thursdays, 5:00 PM–6:15 PM
Scheller College of Business 100
Office Hours Slots for office hours are listed on the course calendar below. The calendar is on Eastern Standard Time, and you can also subscribe to it (on Google Calendar). Visit any slot for project help and grading concerns.

Infrastructure Piazza will be used as the main communications medium for announcements. Our Canvas site contains the full syllabus and final grades for each assignment, and we'll also post announcements there. We'll use Gradescope to show you grades that are rubric-based.
Textbooks The textbook is optional, but we recommend Computer Security: Principle and Practice, 4th Edition, by William Stallings and Lawrie Brown. We also recommend Security Engineering by Ross Anderson and Cryptography Engineering by Ferguson, Schneier, and Kohno.
Prerequisites CS 2200 or ECE 3057 or ECE 3058

Grading

Below is a description of how we'll calculate grades:

Quizzes 10% 10 true/false and multiple-choice quizzes. One quiz per week, which is worth 1%.
Projects 60% Four projects, 15% each.
Cybersecurity Policy MS students: you can replace one project with a policy-oriented report. See Canvas for details.
Exams 30% Two remote exams, each worth 15%; see the course schedule for exam dates.

Course Policies

This is a short version. For the full list, please see Canvas.

Ethics We will be discussing attacks in this class, some of them quite nasty. None of this is in any way an invitation to undertake these attacks in any fashion other than with informed consent of all involved and affected parties. The existence of a security hole is no excuse. These issues concern not only professional ethics but also Georgia Tech policy and state and federal law. If there is any question in your mind about what conduct is allowable, contact the instructors first.
Honor Code Georgia Tech aims to cultivate a community based on trust, academic integrity, and honor. Please see the Honor Code at the Policy Library.