Chris Valasek Explained

Chris Valasek
Birth Date:2 June 1982
Birth Place:Ford City, Pennsylvania, USA
Alma Mater:University of Pittsburgh
Fields:Computer Science
Known For:Summercon Organizer, Automotive Hacking

Chris Valasek is a computer security researcher with Cruise Automation, a self-driving car startup owned by GM, and best known for his work in automotive security research.[1] Prior to his current employment, he worked for IOActive, Coverity, Accuvant, and IBM. Valasek holds a Bachelors in Computer Science from University of Pittsburgh. He currently lives in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.

Valasek has publicly demonstrated many security vulnerabilities, with particular focus on Microsoft Windows heap exploitation. His 2009 presentation "Practical Windows XP/2003 Heap Exploitation"[2] at Black Hat presented a novel approach to gaining elevated access in a Windows environment. Later research, such as his 2010 paper "Understanding the Low Fragmentation Heap: From Allocation to Exploitation"[3] demonstrated ways to circumvent vendor mitigations to the approaches outlined in his prior work.

In 2013, he and Charlie Miller demonstrating a number of attack vectors against ECUs in automotive control networks.[4] Together with Miller, they have produced a survey of remote attack surfaces in then-current model year automobiles, an important first step in establishing the state of the art of automotive security and safety research.[5] [6]

References

https://www.usatoday.com/story/tech/talkingtech/2017/07/31/gms-self-driving-car-unit-cruise-hires-famous-car-hackers/525651001/

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: Uber hires two security researchers to improve car technology. August 28, 2015. [Reuters].
  2. McDonald. John. Valasek. Chris. 2009-07-25. Practical Windows XP/2003 Heap Exploitation. 84. 2017-03-01.
  3. Valasek. Chris. 2010-07-25. Understanding the Low Fragmentation Heap. 86. 2017-03-01.
  4. Hackers Reveal Nasty New Car Attacks--With Me Behind The Wheel (Video). 2013-07-24. Andy Greenberg. Andy Greenberg. Forbes.
  5. Miller. Charlie. Valasek. Chris. A Survey of Remote Automotive Attack Surfaces. 92. 2017-03-01.
  6. How Hackable Is Your Car? Consult This Handy Chart. 2014-08-06. Andy Greenberg. Wired.