A graphic showing Frank Li's new title as Associate Professor

Cybersecurity and Privacy Faculty Earns Promotion and Tenure

The Georgia Institute of Technology recently announced that FrankLi has been promoted from Assistant Professor to Associate Professor and has been granted tenure.

Li, an accomplished computer security and privacy researcher, joined Georgia Tech in 2020 as the Institute was launching the School of Cybersecurity and Privacy (SCP). He holds a joint appointment with the School of Electrical and Computer Engineering (ECE). 

“While tenure may be an individual's milestone, in reality, it reflects the help, support, and hard work of countless others,” Li said.

He credits his accomplishments to the ongoing mentorship and support he has received from faculty and staff at SCP, ECE, and Georgia Tech.

“I'm also extremely thankful to work with such amazing students at Georgia Tech, especially the Ph.D. students in my research lab, and the BS and MS students in my classes, who help our research efforts. Georgia Tech has been an amazing place to start my faculty career,” said Li.

Li advises five Ph.D. students at his Better Empirically Established Security (BEES) lab in SCP. They take a data-driven approach to understanding how security and privacy concerns manifest in practice, and use the insights gained to drive improvements in real-world security.

Their research examines how users, security operators, and attackers behave in various security and privacy-sensitive situations, often using internet-wide measurements, network traffic analysis, user studies and experiments, and large-scale data mining.

“The tenure and promotion to associate professor rank is in recognition of the outstanding research program Frank has developed at SCP,” said Mustaque Ahamad, interim chair and Regents’ Entrepreneur.

“He is an award-winning educator. We look forward to his continued leadership in the important areas of usable security and network security in the future.”

Li was among nine College of Computing faculty members who received promotion and tenure this year.

John P. Imlay Jr. Dean of Computing Vivek Sarkar emailed the College community with the good news.

“We are truly thrilled to celebrate this moment with you, as we recognize your contributions to our students and to the advancement of our College and Institute in so many ways,” he said.

In 2025, Li received the prestigious CAREER Award from the National Science Foundation (NSF). His CAREER project will investigate real-world uses of FIDO2/passkeys and address security and usability issues that can arise. A goal of his research is to identify and resolve problems before they become widespread and more difficult to solve.