General Information
- Class Time: Tuesday — Thursday 10:30a - 11:30a, Friday 10:30a - 1:30p
- Location: UPC Building C6 Room 003
- Professor: Ellen Zegura (ewz@cc)
- Teaching Assistant: Jon Olson (jsolson@gatech)
Books
The first book is the official textbook for this course. Additional readings will be provided as handouts in class. The remaining books are good sources of additional information for students, but these texts are not required.
- Required Security In Computing (4th Edition), by Charles P. Pfleeger and Shari Lawrence Pfleeger, Prentice Hall, 2007, ISBN 0-13-239077-9
Course Description
This course provides a one-semester, initial overview on the topic of Information Security. It is designed to help the student of any major -- undergraduate or graduate -- understand this important priority in society today. From an external perspective, it touches on the issues surrounding the private citizens' concern for privacy, the government impact on laws and public policy, the importance of management and administration, and the place information security holds in overall business risk. Technically, the course examines the general dimension of providing security for information processing systems--secure operating systems and applications, network security, cryptography, security protocols, etc.
Course Objective
This course provides the student with a background, foundation, and insight into the full dimension of the subject of Information Security. This knowledge will serve as basis for future study in selected aspects of this important field or as an important dimension to their effectiveness in the broader computer science field. The primary objectives of the course are to:
- Understand the importance of information security and how it affects our changing world.
- Identify the key areas of information security and how they "work".
- Learn how to critically analyze situations of computer use, identifying the issues, consequences, and viewpoints.
As a part of your general education, the course will also help you learn to:
- Communicate (written and verbally) about a complex, technical topic simply and coherently.
- Work and interact collaboratively in groups to examine, understand and explain key aspects of information security
Teaching Philosophy
The primary purpose of this course is to help you understand threats to your information systems and how to defend against them. This is not something you can learn by instruction alone. As instructor, I can only guide and assist you. Thus, all of the class activities are designed to help you learn.
The subject is broad and complicated. Together, we will share our knowledge and experiences to explore, understand, and simplify the topic.
I make extensive use of classroom discussions based on the basic text and additional reading that I assign or you discover. I use homework and problems to reinforce skills or understanding. I use critical and analytical writing assignments to make you challenge and question what you read. You will be given many opportunities to express and defend your views regarding the impact of the subject on you, society, a business / organization, or the information system.
You will be expected to participate actively in discussions. On any given issue, you may be asked to summarize and critique reading assignments from the text or articles that you have read.
Class Participation and Attendance
Discovery does not arise from instruction but from personal engagement with the controversies and potentials of a computerized society. You have to be in class to contribute to and benefit from that personal engagement. As shown below, a quarter of your grade depends on class participation and attendance.
In this class, engagement will take several forms:
- You will be expected to read, summarize, and interpret the articles for yourself and others.
- You will be expected to study problems, techniques, and approaches individually and in groups, and then present your findings both orally and in writing.
- You will be expected to critique the perspectives/opinions of both authors and classmates in discussions and position papers.
At any class period, you may be asked to summarize and critique readings from the book or elsewhere in an "elevator speech" for the class. On such occasions, you are invited to refer to notes you've made in response to the readings. You may also be quizzed on the high points of the material.
If you are unable to attend class, notify the TA by email before the period begins for consideration of an excused absence. Unexcused absences will be factored into your grade.
General Assignment Guidelines
Writing Style
All assignments are expected to be grammatically correct with accurate spelling. All writing assignments should be proofread and corrected before submission. Incomplete sentences will not be read. For footnotes and bibliographies, students will use a standard citation style. Students are encouraged to learn and use tools such as EndNote (for Word, available for free from OIT) or BiBTeX (for LaTeX).
Late Policy
Homework and papers are due at the start of class on the due date, unless otherwise specified. All assignments must be turned in for a passing grade.
Academic Honesty
I recognize and fully support the Georgia Tech Academic Honor Code as presently defined for the Georgia Tech community. A copy of the Honor Code can be found at this Georgia Tech website.
All students are expected to maintain traditional standards of academic integrity by giving proper credit for all work referenced, quoted, etc. Unless otherwise stated, all work is individual work by each student.
Plagiarizing is defined by Webster's as "to steal and pass off (the ideas or words of another) as one's own: use (another's production) without crediting the source." Quote and attribute any words that are not your own. If caught plagiarizing, you will be dealt with according to the GT Academic Honor Code.
Unless specifically identified as group work; quizzes, tests, take-home-tests, homework, etc. are to be completed alone.
Grading
Your grade will be based on the following evaluated tasks:
- Class project (30%)
- Quizzes (25%)
- Class participation & attendance (20%)
- Homework (25%)
All assignments and projects are required for passing the course. Any assignment turned in by email that contains a virus will receive an automatic zero (Note: anti-virus software is available for free through OIT).