Baker College of Flint, Mich., defeated defending champion Texas A&M University and four other regional winners from across the country to capture the third annual National Collegiate Cyber Defense Competition, which concluded in San Antonio, Texas, over the weekend. Texas A&M finished a close second, and the University of Louisville took third. Also competing for the championship were the Community College of Baltimore County, Mount San Antonio College of Los Angeles County, and the Rochester Institute of Technology.
Hosted by the Center for Infrastructure Assurance and Security (CIAS) at the University of Texas at San Antonio (UTSA), the event pits six regional winners, each given a similar small enterprise network to protect, against a team made up of experienced security professionals dubbed the Red Team, a.k.a. Team Hilarious.
Teams are scored on how well they protect their identical networks, made up a Cisco router and five servers: Windows 2003 running Internet Information Services, Windows 2000 running DNS, Solaris X86 running Apache and OpenSSL, Gentoo running MySQL and NFS, and BSD running Sendmail. Team workstations can run Vista, Windows, Fedora, or BSD, as the team prefers. Teams are required to provide SMTP, POP3, HTTP, HTTPS,and DNS services throughout the competition, and outages on any of those services result in deductions from their score. At specified times, the teams are also asked to bring up FTP, SSH, RDP, and VNC services, in accordance with the 2008 competition rules.
In addition to the attackers (the Red Team) and the defenders (the Blue Teams), there is also a White Team. The White Team acts as the overall network operations center, observers, and as communications center. All requests for information, assistance, and problem reporting by the competing teams go through the White Team; teams are not allowed direct communication with the outside world except for publicly available information and software available on the Internet. The White Team also delivers in-competition requests for new services and scores the teams' performance.
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In addition to a few members of the press, the Red Team room was also visited by various federal agents. A contingent from the Secret Service was present all weekend. Three black-suited gentlemen claiming to be from the FBI were present Friday. Defense Information Systems Agency agents were present as part of the competition infrastructure, and among their other duties, helped escort journalists from room to room during the event.
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Baltimore County Community College, the only team with a female competitor, and Mount San Antonio Community College in Los Angeles, proved that network security skills are not the exclusive domain of larger, better-known institutions. Their presence at this national competition is roughly the equivalent of a community college basketball team making it to the NCAA's Final Four, and both schools and students deserve kudos for going head to head against teams from much larger schools, especially since those schools may include two graduate students on their team.
Dr. Gregory White, director of the UTSA CIAS, one of the founders of the original competition when it was held on a regional basis rather than nationally, explained there is a large network and computer security population in San Antonio, primarily because the Air Intelligence Agency is located there. UTSA was a logical place to become an academic center for computer and network security. That led to it become the first Texas university to be designated as a "Center for Academic Excellence in Information Assurance Education" by both the DHS and the National Security Agency, and it currently offers bachelor and masters-level degrees in information security from several of its schools.
Sponsors for this year's event included the AT&T Foundation, DHS, Cisco Systems, Acronis, Northrop Grumman, Accenture, the Information Systems Security Association, Core Security, our sister site ThinkGeek, Code Magazine, and Pepsi. White said that more sponsors are needed for future competitions in order to do all the things CIAS wants to accomplish.
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I agree with my fellow Texan, Joe Barr.
The word "Cyber" does sound very 90s.
Which reminds me, AMC tomorrow night...Wargames is on, 25th years.
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