The Secure and Resilient Systems group seeks a research scientist to support research and development of cutting-edge low-level systems software security technologies. The research scientist will support a team that invents, prototypes, and evaluates new security approaches throughout the systems software stack.
Some topics of interest to a good candidate may include: systems software (e.g., operating systems including RTOS, hypervisors), computer architecture (e.g., tagged architectures), peripheral hardware (e.g., custom device drivers, FPGA hardware, bus protocols), compilers (e.g., frontends, IR & optimization, backends) and/or program analysis (e.g., fuzzer implementation, automated static analysis).
Secure and Resilient Systems research scientists need a strong background in computer science fundamentals (e.g., algorithms, data structures, program languages), experience with software development practices for large projects (e.g., version control, debugging techniques), an understanding of the system software stack and the software/hardware interface (e.g., at least one ISA, assembly code), and propensity for the research process (e.g., breaking big problems down, designing experiments, analyzing data).
If you have taken computer architecture, operating systems, and/or compilers courses, you should apply for this position. If you have written a device driver, a scheduling algorithm, or a compiler optimization pass, you definitely should apply for this position. If you know why seL4 is more secure when run in a single core configuration, why the Rust compiler uses LLVM instead of GCC, or why malware writers love the CPUID instruction, then you need to apply for this position!
Required Qualifications:
Desired Qualifications:
Software Powered by iCIMS
www.icims.com