Most recently, I was a security engineer at Snap.
Formerly, I was a software engineer at Google working on the Chrome browser
security
team. I primarily worked on Web Platform
Security, but I also was strongly interested in usable
security. Check out my Chromium
contributions and the bugs
I own.
I am a University of California,
Berkeley Ph.D. graduate from the Computer Science Department,
where I focused in security, programming languages, software
engineering, and the intersection thereof. I was advised by Dawn Song. My graduate
research mainly focused on making the Web a safer place. Check out WebBlaze for more like-minded
folk.
During the summer of 2012, I interned at
Coverity to work on static analysis
tool research for web security.
In the prior summer, 2011, I was a research intern at
Microsoft Research.
While at Microsoft, I worked in the
Research in Software Engineering (RiSE)
group with Juan Chen,
Ben Livshits,
and Nikhil Swamy.
Previously, I earned a B.S. and a M.S. from
Brown University.
From 2007 to 2008, I worked in the
Fishworks
group at Sun Microsystems. For posterity's sake, you can view my
old Brown University undergraduate
home page.
In the past, I was a teaching assistant for
cs161,
the undergraduate computer security course, under my adviser, Professor Dawn Song.
In the spring of 2010, I was also a teaching assistant for
the same course,
but as taught by professors
Vern Paxson and
David Wagner.
I used to love using
Arch Linux for its
minimalist approach and awesome
package management system
(and
related tools).
However, I've since switched to
FreeBSD
Ubuntu with
ZFS on
Linux encrypted LVM on RAID1. I love ZFS, and the ZFS on
Linux project is wonderful, but I ran into enough issues over 4 years that
I finally gave up using it on my home machine. However, I did work on the
zfs toolbox.
You can view a retrospective on my nuptials.
When I'm not doing research, I
run,
rock climb,
ski,
take photos,
roast coffee,
and
tap dance.
I am also working on my
Hebrew,
but it currently leaves much to be desired.
publications blog
View and download
the source
for this site on GitHub.