Sergey Bratus, Iván Arce, Michael E. Locasto, Stefano Zanero
Offensive security—or, in plain English, the practice of exploitation—has greatly enhanced our understanding of what it means for computers to be trustworthy. Having grown from hacker conventions that fit into a single room into a distinct engineering discipline in all but the name, offensive computing has so far been content with a jargon and an informal “hacker curriculum.” Now that it is unmistakably an industry, and an engineering specialization, it faces the challenge of defining itself as one, in a language that is understood beyond its own confines—most importantly, by makers of law and policy.
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