When: Thursday, Sept. 25, 2008
Where: Sun's Santa Clara Campus Mansion
        (SCA07 just across the road from the Auditorium)
What: Security technologies to confine flawed and malicious software
Time: 7:30pm-10:00pm

You are invited to hear Stephen Smalley, of the US National Security Agency 
(NSA), speak on security technologies to confine flawed and malicious software.

Stephen was instrumental in bringing the Flux Advanced Security Kernel (Flask) 
and Type Enforcement (TE) technologies to Linux through the SELinux project. 
Flask is a flexible form of mandatory access control (MAC) that has been 
gaining popularity since its introduction in SELinux, SEBSD, and SEDarwin.

Stephen is now involved as a project lead on the OpenSolaris.org Flexible 
Mandatory Access Control (FMAC) project that is integrating FLASK and TE into 
OpenSolaris.

Stephen Smalley Bio:

Stephen Smalley is a Technical Director in the Defense Computing Research 
Office of the National Information Assurance Research Laboratory of the NSA.

Mr. Smalley received a 2005 Director of National Intelligence (DNI) Fellows 
award for his technical achievements within the Intelligence Community.

Prior to his work on OpenSolaris and SELinux, Mr. Smalley performed research 
and development in the area of operating system security through the 
development and analysis on a series of secure research operating systems. Mr. 
Smalley received his B.S. degree in Computer Science and Mathematics from the 
Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology.

For additional info please see the following URLs:

OpenSolaris.org Flexible Mandatory Access Control Project Page:

http://opensolaris.org/os/project/fmac/

NSA SELinux Reference:

http://www.nsa.gov/selinux/

Map to the Mansion:

http://maps.yahoo.com/#mvt=m&lat=37.393386&lon=-121.955218&zoom=16&q1=4070%20George%20Sellon%20Circle%2095054

We may also have some pizza and sodas.
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