This course provides an introduction to network security, web security, reverse engineering, penetration testing, and network forensics. The forms of the attacks and the detection and defense of the attacks will be discussed. Students will be exposed to tools and techniques employed in network monitoring, web security, and penetration testing. Assignments will explore the difficulties and challenges in planning for and conducting an assessment exposing potential vulnerabilities. Students will examine the areas of intrusion detection, evidence collection, network auditing, network security policy design and implementation as well as preparation for and defense against attacks. The key elements of risk management (risk analysis, risk assessment, and vulnerability assessment) as well as relevant methodologies will be introduced and explored.
Learning Outcomes
Knowledge: Having attended and succeeded in the course, the student is able to identify the traits of hackers and describe the techniques that they can use to gain unauthorized access to a networked computer system Understanding: Having attended and succeeded in the course, the student describe various network monitoring solutions and issues Application: Having attended and succeeded in the course, the student is able to employ various tools to assess and address network security issues, web security, and reserve engineering Analysis: Having attended and succeeded in the course, the student is able to recognize and discuss possible security exploitation opportunities Synthesis: Having attended and succeeded in the course, the student is able to develop a plan for a penetration test Evaluation: Having attended and succeeded in the course, the student is able to discuss the fundamental principles of risk management and its key elements, laws and other policy measures that govern cybersecurity threats and incidents and apply the above in systems security evaluations
Student Performance Evaluation
Specific details on grading can be found on the course’ s website
The courses of the Computer Science Department are designated with the letters "CS" followed by three decimal digits. The first digit denotes the year of study during which students are expected to enroll in the course.
First Digit
Advised Year of Enrollment
1,2,3,4
First, Second, Third and Fourth year
5,6
Graduate courses
7,8,9
Specialized topics
Code
Computer Science Area
A1
Computer architecture and microelectronics
A2
Computer systems, parallel and high performance computing
A3
Computer security and distributed systems
A4
Computer networks, mobile computing, and telecommunications
B1
Algorithms and systems analysis
B2
Databases, information and knowledge management
B3
Software engineering and programming languages
B4
Artificial Intelligence and machine learning
C1
Signal processing and analysis
C2
Computer vision and robotics
C3
Computer graphics and human-computer interaction
C4
Βioinformatics, medical informatics, and computational neuroscience
The following pages contain tables (one for each course category) summarizing courses offered by the undergraduate studies program of the Computer Science Department at the University of Crete. Courses with code-names beginning with "MATH" or "PHYS" are taught by the Mathematics Department and Physics Department respectively at the University of Crete.