A New Cohort of Cyber Students Are Ready to Change the World
On Friday, 18 Georgia Tech students graduated with a Master of Science in Cybersecurity (MS Cybersecurity) degree.
Around one-third of the graduates are women, and they come from at least half a dozen countries. These newly minted MS Cybersecurity graduates are set to work for companies ranging from Apple to startups.
The following students have petitioned to graduate for Fall 22: Abdulrahman Albattah, Abhro Bhuniya, Klay Brown, Constantine Caras, Paras Chetal, Harini Dandu, Somya Doshi, Patrick Erdmann, Jeffrey Ho, Nathan Jaco, Diego Juarez, Rayan Kashghari, Himani Mukne, Chaitanya Rahalkar, Shree Raksha, Harsh Singh, Anushka Virgaonkar, and Ting-Wei Wang.
The School of Cybersecurity and Privacy at Georgia Tech was formed in September 2020. It is one of five schools in the top-ranked College of Computing, and it builds on the strong foundation and continued success of the cybersecurity research, education, and service efforts at Georgia Tech that began more than 20 years ago.
The school's work is interdisciplinary and multidisciplinary, with many current faculty members having joint appointments with other schools in the College of Computing, as well as with the School of Computational Science and Engineering within the College of Engineering, the Scheller College of Business, the School of Public Policy, and the Sam Nunn School of International Affairs, both in the Ivan Allen College of the Liberal Arts.
We are thrilled to announce Vivek Sarkar as the new Dean of the College of Computing at Georgia Tech! With a distinguished career spanning academia and industry, Sarkar's leadership promises to elevate our community to new heights. https://t.co/2mX5D46cJz pic.twitter.com/LxpLTCXWZV
— Georgia Tech Computing (@gtcomputing) April 12, 2024
@GeorgiaTech's dedication to excellence in computer science (CS) has been recognized once again, with the latest U.S. News and World Report rankings unveiling the institution at 7th place overall for graduate CS studies.https://t.co/qavNUSTb7n pic.twitter.com/BcGyGBQld8
— Georgia Tech Computing (@gtcomputing) April 10, 2024