University home »
Faculty of Science »
Department of Computer Science »
Courses » COMPSCI 725 S2 C » Lectures »
Computer Science
Lectures
This page was updated on 31 October 2008.Announcements
- 20 November, 12:30pm to 1:30pm, Cloud Computing and Privacy, hosted by the NZ Privacy Commissioner.
- 5 November, from 6pm to 9pm: OWASP meeting, with free admission to anyone interested in application security, with 1-hour presentations by Brett Moore of Insomnia Security on "Common Application Flaws - Explain, Detect, Prevent", and by Beau Butler of Security-Assessment.com on "In your Browser, Jackin your Clicks".
- 3 November: Public lecture by Lawrence Lessig.
- Tutorials are in room 187.
- Handling absence or illness:
- If you must leave for family emergencies etc, PLEASE talk to the lecturer, or somehow get a message to the department. Very few problems are so urgent that we cannot be told quite quickly.
- For problems affecting assignments or tests, see the lecturer (or send email, or call on the telephone). This must be done as soon as reasonably possible, if we are to make alternative arrangements that will prevent you from getting a poor mark on this test or assignment.
- For illness during exams (or other problems that affect exam performance) students MUST contact the Examinations Office as soon as possible, and in any event within a week. The time limits and other rules of the University's Aegrotat Policy are strictly enforced.
- Many students have missed out on a whole semester of study because they just went away. Many students have failed an examination because they did not report problems until they received the failing grade. In general, if there is a problem that will affect your study you should speak to someone as soon as possible.
- Students should sit the examination if at all possible, even if they do nothing much more than hand in a script with their name.
- Students should read the examinations handbook that they receive, and they should double-check the examination timetable to make sure they don't miss any of their exams.
- Archived announcements.
Tentative Schedule
Note: the date listed for student presentation #x is the approximate date on which this presentation will occur; dates will be adjusted when students drop. Students will be assigned numbers by a random process during the first week of classes.
- Week 1 (21 July - 25 July). Select class
representative.
- Handout 1: General Information, version 1.0 of 19 July 2008.
- Handout 2: Selection of Oral Presentations, version 1.0 of 19 July 2008.
- Handout 3: List of Suggested Articles for Oral Presentations, version 1.31 of 1 August 2008.
- Handout 4: Randomly Assigned Student Numbers, version 1.0 of 28 July 2008.
- Handout 5: First set of Lecture Slides, version 1.0 of 19 July 2008.
- [R1] B. Lampson, "Computer Security in the Real World", IEEE Computer 37:6, 37-46, June 2004.
- [R2] Computer System Statute 2000, University of Auckland. Available http://www.auckland.ac.nz/security/images/ComputerStatute.pdf, July 2007.
- [R3] "Information and Communiations Technology (ICT) Acceptable Use Policy", Version 1.0, The University of Auckland, 1 January 2007. Available: http://www.auckland.ac.nz/security/ICTAcceptableUsePolicy.htm, July 2007.
- [R4] "Department of Computer Science Computer System Regulations", 1999. Available: https://www.cs.auckland.ac.nz/administration/handbook/ugrad/UG.DoCSCSR.html, July 2007.
- Week 2 (28 July - 1 August). Select papers and dates for student
oral presentations in Weeks 5-13. No lecture on Friday 1 August.
- Handout 6: Articles to be Presented by Students, version 7.0 of 15 October 2008.
- Handout 7: Oral Presentations, Projects and Term Reports, version 1.0 of 30 July 2008.
- Week 3 (4 August - 8 August). Finalise the selection of papers
and dates for student oral presentations. Discuss how to
prepare an oral presentation. Discuss term project requirements.
- Handout 8: Software Law and Ethics, version 1.0 of 8 August 2008.
- [R5] "What Are Patents, Trademarks, Servicemarks, and Copyrights?", US Patent and Trademark Office, 13 May 2004. Available: http://www.uspto.gov/web/offices/pac/doc/general/whatis.htm, July 2007.
- [R6] "Patent Basics", Office of Technology Transfer, Clemson University, 2002. Available: http://www.clemson.edu/research/ottSite/ottStart_IntelectPatents.htm, July 2007.
- [R7] "Copyright Office Basics", U.S. Copyright Office, Circular 1, July 2006. Available: http://www.copyright.gov/circs/circ1.html, July 2007.
- [R8] "Copyright Protection in New Zealand", Ministry of Economic Development, November 2005. Available: http://www.med.govt.nz/templates/Page____7290.aspx, July 2007.
- [R9] K. Nichols, "The Age of Software Patents", IEEE Computer 32:4, 25-31, April 1999.
- [R10] P. Samuelson, "Encoding the Law into Digital Libraries", Comm. ACM 41:4, 13-18, April 1998.
- [R11] "IEEE Code of Ethics", IEEE, February 2006. Available: http://www.ieee.org/web/membership/ethics/code_ethics.html, July 2007.
- [R12] "Our Code of Ethics", Royal Society of New Zealand, 2003. Available: http://www.rsnz.govt.nz/directory/code_ethics.php, July 2007.
- [R13] "The Ten Commandments of Computer Ethics", Computer Ethics Institute, 1992. Available: http://www.cpsr.org/issues/ethics/cei.
- [R14] H. Rosner, "Steal this software," The.Standard.com, 21 June 2000. Available: http://www.cnn.com/2000/TECH/computing/06/21/steal.software.idg/, July 2007.
- [R15] P. Radatti, "Cybersoft, Incorporated Moral Guidelines," Cybersoft, Inc, May 1995. Available: http://www.cybersoft.com/whitepapers/papers/locks.shtml, July 20067.
- Week 4 (11 August - 15 August). Tutorial sessions:
Students #1 - #4 give practice oral presentations. No lecture on
Friday 15 August.
- Handout 9: Report Writing 1, version 1.0 of 10 August 2007.
- Week 5 (18 August - 22 August). Student oral presentations #1 -
#4: each presentation will be 10 minutes in length, with an 8-minute
discussion period. Tutorial sessions: Students #5 - #8
give practice oral presentations.
- Assignment 1 due by email to instructor before lecture of Friday 22 August: Term paper or project proposal (one sentence).
- Week 6 (25 August - 29 August). Student oral presentations
#5 - #8. No lecture on Friday 29 August.
Term break (30 August - 14 September)
- Week 7 (15 September - 19 September). Tutorial sessions:
Students #9 - #12 give practice oral presentations. No lecture on
Monday 15 September.
- Assignment 2 due by email to instructor before lecture of Friday 19 September: first draft of title, synopsis and references (with complete bibliographic detail) for term paper; or goal statement of term project, list of software & hardware resources required and a plan for obtaining these, and proposed methodology.
- Handout 10: Cryptography and Steganography (version 1.0 of 10 August 2007).
- [R16] M. Stamp, Information Security: Principles and Practice, John Wiley & Sons, Inc., September 2005, pp. 1-7, 11-21, 26-30, 33-39, 50-51, 54-55, 61-62, 75-81, 85-87, 100-104, 325-338.
- Handout 11: Trusted Operating Systems (Mark Stamp's lecture slides).
- [R17] M. Stamp, Information Security: Principles and Practice, John Wiley & Sons, Inc., September 2005, pp. 325-338.
- Week 8 (22 September - 26 September). Student oral
presentations #9 - #12. Tutorial sessions: Students #13 -
#16 give practice oral presentations.
- Week 9 (29 September - 3 October). Student oral presentations
#13 - #16. Tutorial sessions: Students #17 - #20 give
practice oral presentations.
- Assignment 3 due Friday 3 October, by email to instructor, sent before lecture begins: title and abstract, for publication on class website; and a detailed outline of your term paper or project report.
- Handout 12: Finalising your Term Paper (updated 10 Oct 08 with correct deadlines).
- Week 10 (6 October - 10 October). Monday: student oral presentations #17 - #20. Tutorial sessions: Students #21 - #24 give practice oral presentations.
- Week 11 (13 October - 17 October). Student oral presentations
#21 - #22.
- Handout 13: Practice Final Exam, administered in class on Friday 17 October.
- Week 12 (20 October - 24 October). Monday: student oral
presentations #23 - #24. Friday: discussion of student answers to sample
final exam.
- Handout 14: Sample answers to practice final exam, posted 21 October.
- Handout 15: Samples of Summary Feedback on Term Papers (not yet available).
- Assignment 4 due in class Friday 24 October: hardcopy of final version of your term paper, with email sent to instructor before lecture.
- Final Examination. Date and time to be arranged. This will be a 2-hour examination, with a brief settling-in and exam-reading period before the examination begins. Closed book, no calculators. The location will be announced on the morning of the exam (and possibly as early as 5pm on the day prior to the exam), at nDeva, at the Exams Office website, and by hardcopy postings on campus.
-
Related Programmes