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Posts Tagged ‘Georgia Tech’

What’s the best way to let people know they’re “botted?”

Friday, February 22nd, 2013

cyber security imageA bot believed to have netted $14 million in illicit profits has been turned into a golden learning opportunity, yielding important insights into how the online community can best alert and assist customers with infected systems.

So say Georgia Tech researchers who  announced the results of a study based on the industry’s response to the DNS Changer Trojan and shared recommendations to help curb future malware outbreaks.

From 2007 to 2011, the DNS Changer Trojan hijacked Internet searches and re-routed the Web browsers of infected computers to fraudulent sites using the rogue DNS servers operated by the Rove Digital advertising network.

Active social media warnings effective

The DNS Changer Remediation Study identified phone calls, billing notices and redirecting users to customized Web pages among the most effective methods to notify customers that their systems were infected.

Researchers Wei Meng and Ruian Duan, working under the supervision of Georgia Tech School of Computer Science Professor Wenke Lee, also found that “active” social media warnings were useful for enabling remediation.

GoogleWith this approach, sites such as Google directly informed users they were infected through their browser windows, a tactic that proved to be more effective in motivating users to disinfect their systems than passive warnings issued in general posts or news articles on social media platforms.

“Social media can have an important role to play in alerting users to infections in their systems and in stemming malware outbreaks. We believe in the importance of implementing active, direct notifications earlier in the process,” Lee said.

The complete DNS Changer Remediation Study is available on the M3AAWG website athttps://www.maawg.org/sites/maawg/files/news/GeorgiaTech_DNSChanger_Study-2013-02-19.pdf.

Mobile browsers vulnerable to cyber crime, Georgia Tech researchers say

Wednesday, December 5th, 2012

Patrick Traynor, assistant professor in the School of Computer Science, and Ph.D. student Chaitrali Amrutkar discovered that mobile browsers are inconsistent in implementing the standards for security indicators recommended by the World Wide Web Consortium.

Is the web browser on your mobile phone safe? Not so much, says a Georgia Tech study, which says even cyber security experts can’t tell if their smartphone browsers have landed on a potentially dangerous website.

In one critical area that informs user decisions—the incorporation of tiny graphical indicators in a browser’s URL field—all of the leading mobile browsers fail to meet security guidelines recommended by the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) for browser safety, leaving even expert users with no way to determine if the websites they visit are real or imposter sites phishing for personal data.

That means that if you visit your bank site, credit card provider or a utility site – you won’t be able to tell if it’s legitimate.

“We found vulnerabilities in all 10 of the mobile browsers we tested, which together account for more than 90 percent of the mobile browsers in use today in the United States,” said Patrick Traynor, assistant professor in Georgia Tech’s School of Computer Science.

“The basic question we asked was, ‘Does this browser provide enough information for even an information-security expert to determine security standing?’ With all 10 of the leading browsers on the market today, the answer was no.”

The graphic icons at issue are called either SSL (“secure sockets layer”) or TLS (“transport layer security”) indicators, and they serve to alert users (a) when their connection to the destination website is secure and (b) that the website they see is actually the site they intended to visit.

Missing icons a problem

The tiny “lock” icon that typically appears in a desktop browser window when users are providing payment information in an online transaction is one example of an SSL indicator. Another is the “https” keyword that appears in the beginning of a desktop browser’s URL field.

Online, web browsers do a good job of following WWC guidelines on their use, but that’s not so with mobile browsers. Why? Because of the smaller screen size, which doesn’t give designers room to incorporate the SSL indicators the same way they do on larger screens.

It’s a vulnerability cyber criminals will likely use for attacks if it isn’t addressed, the researchers say.

“Research has shown that mobile browser users are three times more likely to access phishing sites than users of desktop browsers,” said Chaitrali Amrutkar, a Ph.D. student in the School of Computer Science and principal author of the paper that described the SSL research.

“Is that all due to the lack of these SSL indicators? Probably not, but giving these tools a consistent and complete presence in mobile browsers would definitely help.”

 

 

Expanded I-Corps program could result in hundreds of startups

Monday, July 16th, 2012
Steve Blank

I-Corps is built on the Lean LaunchPad curriculum pioneered by Silicon Valley startup veteran Steve Blank, above, author of The Four Steps to the Epiphany and The Startup Owner’s Manual

This is a huge week for the National Science Foundation, home of the new I-Corps program that, by Friday, will have trained 100 teams of scientists how to turn their innovations into American businesses and jobs.

The NSF I-Corps teaches top U.S. scientists how to be entrepreneurs, how to commercialize their technology, and how to attract private capital. It may be the only U.S. government jobs program supported by both political parties.

The I-Corps program was designed, built, tested and scaled within a year. It leverages the country’s commitment to research, its partnership with private capital and its tolerance for failure in a uniquely American way.

I-Corps says it will taxpayers back with jobs and a competitive edge on a global scale.

On Wednesday, NSF will host an I-Corps anniversary event featuring a celebration and panel.

The nation’s 50 Governors learned about the program and its results from Steve Blank, architect of the program, based on the Customer Development model he created and teaches worldwide.

In the week ahead:

  • Congressional hearing on the NSF program today in Chicago (home to Congressman Dan Lipinski of the House Subcommittee on Research and Science Education Committee on Science, Space, and Technology). I-Corps architect Steve Blank will be called to testify on results. (Ironically, the NSF I-Corp may well be the only education and jobs creation program that both parties support this election year.)
  • A major program update/announcement at NSF headquarters Wednesday, July 18
  • Many other major government and research agencies are working to launch I-Corps programs to generate startups this year
  • NSF will soon announce expansion of the program to a dozen or so more universities
  • two new Universities–George Tech and U of Michigan–begin teaching 54 more teams this month
  • 50 teams of the country’s best scientists and engineers will go through the class every 90 days

I-Corps is built on the Lean LaunchPad curriculum pioneered by Silicon Valley startup veteran Steve Blank, author of The Four Steps to the Epiphany and The Startup Owner’s Manual.

A retired serial entrepreneur, author, and educator who teaches at Stanford, U.C. Berkeley, and Columbia Business School, Blank is best known as the creator of Customer Development, the innovation process that launched the lean startup movement.

Additional information about I-Corps can be found at http://www.nsf.gov/news/special_reports/i-corps/index.jsp

Information about the Lean LaunchPad is here: http://steveblank.com/category/lean-launchpad/

Personalization, innovation and flexibility will be hallmarks of future media

Thursday, December 15th, 2011

Georgia TechThe coming years will bring increased personalization, innovation and flexibility in the media landscape, according to the Georgia Institute of Technology.

These findings were announced in today’s release of the FutureMedia(SM) Outlook 2012, a multimedia report that offers Georgia Tech’s annual viewpoint on the future of media and its impact on people, business and society over the next five to seven years.

“Georgia Tech’s work in Future Media is part of our new Institute for People and Technology,” said Georgia Tech President G. P. “Bud” Peterson.  “By partnering with business and industry on interdisciplinary research, we are able to identify trends and challenges and work to develop transformative solutions.”

According to FutureMedia Outlook 2012, six megatrends will have a pervasive impact:

 

  • Smart Data: In an increasingly noisy world, we’ll have to sift, filter and be smarter about what matters.
  • People Platforms: Beyond “true personalization,” people will not just be consumers. They will be socially driven platforms made of algorithms from personal and associated data that they design and tailor themselves.
  • Content Integrity: Pervasive mobile devices, sprawling networks, clouds and multi-layered platforms have made it more difficult to detect and address our digital vulnerabilities, drawing us to trusted content sources.
  • Nimble Media: Media is evolving from a set of fixed commodities into an energetic, pervasive medium that allows people to navigate across platforms and through different content narratives.
  • 6th Sense: Extraordinary innovations in mixed reality will change the way we see, hear, taste, touch, smell and make sense of the world – giving us a new and powerful 6th sense.
  • Collaboration: We will harness the power of many in an increasingly conversational and participatory world.

For each of the six megatrends, the Outlook 2012 presents fresh and objective insights into those technologies and business practices that will significantly impact the converging media ecosystem. In addition, the report includes demonstrative clips and video interviews with leading Georgia Techresearchers offering real-world examples of the Institute’s innovation in these areas.

“Breakthrough research, innovation and collaboration with our partners have given us a rich and pragmatic basis from which to formulate this annual FutureMedia Outlook,” said Renu Kulkarni, founder and executive director of FutureMedia.

Georgia Tech Reseachers turn the iPhone into a spiPhone

Tuesday, October 18th, 2011

Georgia TechIt’s a pattern that no doubt repeats itself daily in hundreds of millions of offices around the world: People sit down, turn on their computers, set their mobile phones on their desks and begin to work. What if a hacker could use that phone to track what the person was typing on the keyboard just inches away?

A research team at Georgia Tech has discovered how to do exactly that, using a smartphone accelerometer—the internal device that detects when and how the phone is tilted—to sense keyboard vibrations and decipher complete sentences with up to 80 percent accuracy. The procedure is not easy, they say, but is definitely possible with the latest generations of smartphones.

Most recent smartphones vulnerable to this attack

“We first tried our experiments with an iPhone 3GS, and the results were difficult to read,” said Patrick Traynor, assistant professor in Georgia Tech’s School of Computer Science. “But then we tried an iPhone 4, which has an added gyroscope to clean up the accelerometer noise, and the results were much better. We believe that most smartphones made in the past two years are sophisticated enough to launch this attack.”

Previously, Traynor said, researchers have accomplished similar results using microphones, but a microphone is a much more sensitive instrument than an accelerometer.

A typical smartphone’s microphone samples vibration roughly 44,000 times per second, while even newer phones’ accelerometers sample just 100 times per second—two full orders of magnitude less often.

Microphones now protected

Plus, manufacturers have installed security around a phone’s microphone; the phone’s operating system is programmed to ask users whether to give new applications access to most built-in sensors, including the microphone. Accelerometers typically are not protected in this way.

The technique works through probability and by detecting pairs of keystrokes, rather than individual keys (which still is too difficult to accomplish reliably, Traynor said). It models “keyboard events” in pairs, then determines whether the pair of keys pressed is on the left versus right side of the keyboard, and whether they are close together or far apart.

After the system has determined these characteristics for each pair of keys depressed, it compares the results against a preloaded dictionary, each word of which has been broken down along similar measurements (i.e., are the letters left/right, near/far on a standard QWERTY keyboard). Finally, the technique only works reliably on words of three or more letters.

For example, take the word “canoe,” which when typed breaks down into four keystroke pairs: “C-A, A-N, N-O and O-E.” Those pairs then translate into the detection system’s code as follows: Left-Left-Near, Left-Right-Far, Right-Right-Far and Right-Left-Far, or LLN-LRF-RRF-RLF.

Malware would start the process

This code is then compared to the preloaded dictionary and yields “canoe” as the statistically probable typed word. Working with dictionaries comprising about 58,000 words, the system reached word-recovery rates as high as 80 percent.

“The way we see this attack working is that you, the phone’s owner, would request or be asked to download an innocuous-looking application, which doesn’t ask you for the use of any suspicious phone sensors,” said Henry Carter, a PhD student in computer science and one of the study’s co-authors. “Then the keyboard-detection malware is turned on, and the next time you place your phone next to the keyboard and start typing, it starts listening.”

Mitigation strategies for this vulnerability are pretty simple and straightforward, Traynor said. First, since the study found an effective range of just three inches from a keyboard, phone users can simply leave their phones in their purses or pockets, or just move them further away from the keyboard. But a fix that puts less onus on users is to add a layer of security for phone accelerometers.

Users shouldn’t be paranoid

“The sampling rate for accelerometers is already pretty low, and if you cut it in half, you start to approach theoretical limitations that prevent eavesdropping. The malware simply does not have the data to work with,” Traynor said. “But most phone applications can still function even with that lower accelerometer rate. So manufacturers could set that as the default rate, and if someone downloads an application like a game that needs the higher sampling rate, that would prompt a permission question to the user to reset the accelerometer.”

In the meantime, Traynor said, users shouldn’t be paranoid that hackers are tracking their keystrokes through their iPhones.

“The likelihood of someone falling victim to an attack like this right now is pretty low,” he said. “This was really hard to do. But could people do it if they really wanted to? We think yes.”

The finding is reported in the paper, “(sp)iPhone: Decoding Vibrations From Nearby Keyboards Using Mobile Phone Accelerometers,” and will be presented Thursday, Oct. 20, at the 18th ACM Conference on Computer and Communications Security in Chicago. In addition to Carter, Traynor’s coauthors include Georgia Tech graduate student Arunabh Verman and Philip Marquardt of the MIT Lincoln Laboratory.

Atlanta-based CodeGuard keys in angel round for Website protection

Thursday, June 2nd, 2011

CodeguardBy Allan Maurer

ATLANTA – With hackers slipping malware into ad servers and website code, Internet users risk attack whenever they browse a site. Not only that, site owners are often faced with traffic stalling warnings from Google and other search engines and can lose scads of money while a site remains infected. CodeGuard Inc., which has nabbed angel funding from Imlay Investments, say its long-term goal is to prevent and cleanup “this virtual blight.”

“We seek to prevent the distribution of malicious software (malware) through websites.  Every hour thousands of websites are compromised and used for distribution of malware.  Our service allows any website owner to be protected; we make sure that their website will never be used to attack site visitors”, said David Moeller, CEO of CodeGuard.

CodeGuard provides a virtual version control system and stores site data in the cloud. Backups are stored hourly or daily, providing visibility for users into what files have changed.

In the event a hack or an unauthorized change is detected, webmasters can quickly revert to the last known “clean” version and have their site working in minutes without engaging developers to remediate the issue. Hacking can be identified and site owners can be notified before they spread malware, have their links pirated, or act as a parasitic host for spammers.

“A couple of years ago,” Moeller told TechJournal South, “we got bombarded with (malware infected) email.” Now, however, email protection is much better and cyber bad guys needed to find a more efficient vector for distributing their malware. So they turned to websites, even dormant ones, and drive-by malware downloads can happen without a user even being aware of it.

CodeGuard evolved when Jonathan Hochman and Jonah Stein met at Google’s headquarters in Mountain View in 2008. A few months later, Jonah organized a panel at O’Reilly Media’s Web 2.0 Summit to talk about the rising danger of virtual blight on the web: malware, hacking, and advertising scams.

After the panel concluded, Jonathan and Jonah discussed how valuable a cloud-based file integrity monitoring tool would be to fight virtual blight. Jonathan imagined using the tool personally in his consulting business, and Jonah envisioned his clients using the tool to protect their websites. CodeGuard is the result.

While it is still refining its pricing model, Moeller said currently a customer can buy protection for $10 a month for a site that has more 250MB but less than 1GB. The company will likely charge from 10 to 20 percent of what a company pays for monthly hosting, Moeller said.

Moeller noted that large companies use expensive high end protection. “They don’t need us. We’re website protection for the masses,” Moeller said. “It’s our belief that no system is going to prevent all attacks. There will always be attacks where someone figures out how to break in. That’s why you need a backup so you can remediate quickly.”

Atlanta’s “security halo” helped

CodeGuard, founded in April 2010, just launched its public beta version. It raised under $1 million in its angel round from Imlay. Moeller said Atlanta’s deep expertise in the cyber security field has been helpful to the company. “The halo of security in Atlanta has been very helpful,” he said.

Its board includes Dr. Wenke Lee, Georgia Tech College of Computing and GTISC Member. His current research projects are in the areas of botnet detection, malware analysis, virtual machine monitoring, and Web 2.0 security and privacy, with funding from NSF, DHS, and DoD. Dr. Lee has published over 100 articles with more than 20 of them cited more than 100 times. In 2006, Dr. Lee co-founded Damballa Inc., a spin-off from his lab that focuses on botnet detection and mitigation.

Another board member is Dr. Merrick Furst, Georgia Tech College of Computing Distinguished Professor. Furst is known for seminal research in algorithms, complexity theory and artificial intelligence. Merrick co-invented probabilistic circuit analysis and planning graphs, which are highly influential breakthroughs in artificial intelligence. He is a co-founder of Damballa.

CodeGuard is a member of the Georgia Tech Advanced Technology Development Center.

 

 

Georgia Tech to lead $10M project on cybersecurity

Thursday, May 19th, 2011

GA TechATLANTA – Georgia Tech’s Research Institute will lead a $10 million Homeland Security project to look at open source cybersecurity options for potential use by the U.S. government – and eventually there may be money in it for open source developers.

While lead investigator at Georgia Tech, Joshua L. Davis notes that some people think open source software is more vulnerable to cyber attack because the code is public, he says it is actually more adaptable in dealing with security threats.

The five-year project will proceed in three stages. Researchers will first inventory available open source software that might meet government needs; next, it will facilitate connections between agencies and developers; finally, it will direct money to support promising open source projects.

TechJournal South is a TechMedia company. TechMedia presents the annual conferences:

SoutheastVentureConference: www.seventure.org

Internet Summit: www.internetsummit.com

Digital East: www.digitaleast.com

Digital Summit: www.digitalsummit.com

Georgia Tech app measures your Internet speed and bandwidth usage

Monday, May 16th, 2011

GA TechATLANTA – Are you getting the Internet speed and bandwidth you’re paying for? That’s a question likely to become even more important as broadband providers ponder charging by how much bandwidth you use. Georgia Tech researchers have developed an app called Kermit that let’s you know just what speed you’re actually getting and track your bandwidth use over time.

David Terraso reports on Kermit in the Georgia Tech Digital Lounge.

Developed by Beki Grinter, an associate professor in Georgia Tech’s School of Interactive Computing, and her team, Kermit is an easy-to-use application that allows users to monitor and control network usage within their home environment, including measuring the actual network speed made available by their Internet service providers (ISPs) and tracking bandwidth usage over time.

“I think it’s widely recognized now, and the FCC is [aware], that people are not getting the speeds that are sometimes advertised,” Grinter said. “What Kermit does is it makes that very visible to people in their homes.”

Kermit works by showing the user a simple view of all the home’s devices connected to the Internet: computers, mobile devices, digital video recorders, game systems or anything else that’s networked. Users can rename their devices, or label them with photos to show what they are. At any moment, Kermit can not only show who’s using the Internet, whether through a desktop or mobile device, but it can also limit a device’s speed. The user can even limit or prioritize a specific machine’s traffic.

The researchers tested the system using a group of users who were not particularly computer savvy. The researcher’s say that after using Kermit, they were able to see their speeds over time and by the end of the study were either beginning to question whether or not they were actually getting the speeds they paid for, or realized that indeed they were.

Kermit works by showing the user a simple view of all the home’s devices connected to the Internet: computers, mobile devices, digital video recorders, game systems or anything else that’s networked. Users can rename their devices, or label them with photos to show what they are. At any moment, Kermit can not only show who’s using the Internet, whether through a desktop or mobile device, but it can also limit a device’s speed. The user can even limit or prioritize a specific machine’s traffic.

TechJournal South is a TechMedia company. TechMedia presents the annual conferences:

SoutheastVentureConference: www.seventure.org

Internet Summit: www.internetsummit.com

Digital East: www.digitaleast.com

Digital Summit: www.digitalsummit.com

Privacy the key obstacle to adopting e-health records

Monday, September 20th, 2010

NCSURALEIGH, NC - The United States could achieve significant health care savings if it achieved widespread adoption of electronic health records (EHRs), but insufficient privacy protections are hindering public acceptance of the EHR concept, according to a new paper from researchers from North Carolina State University. The paper outlines steps that could be taken to boost privacy and promote the use of EHRs.

A good number of Southeast firms, ranging from startups to established companies, are selling electronic health record technologies.

“Electronic health records could reduce costs in the U.S. by an estimated $80 to 100 billion each year,” says Dr. David Baumer, head of the business management department at NC State and co-author of the paper.

“Using electronic records allows the health-care system to operate more efficiently, minimizes duplicative testing, et cetera. But you can only get those cost reductions if everyone, or nearly everyone, makes use of the records, from health-care providers to pharmacies to insurance companies.”

 Lack of public support

However, a lack of public support related to privacy concerns has hindered its progress. And Baumer says that those concerns are not entirely unwarranted. For example, there is some evidence showing that EHRs can facilitate identity theft. But EHRs have become prevalent in the European Union, which has significantly more stringent privacy protections and whose citizens feel more comfortable with the EHR concept.

“We are moving in the right direction in regard to putting better privacy protections in place, but we have a long way to go,” Baumer says. And that lack of privacy protection is hindering the adoption of EHRs. “For example, approximately 50 percent of people in the U.S. have EHRs, but doctors will have to check for paper records until EHRs are so widespread that checking for paper records is no longer considered due diligence.” By way of comparison, approximately 95 percent of people in Holland have EHRs.

The researchers include a list of technical and legal recommendations that could make EHRs more viable in the U.S. For example, the paper calls for the introduction of civil penalties if people share information inappropriately or with inappropriate parties.

“Incorporating EHRs into our health care system is important,” Baumer says. “The Obama administration’s health plan relies on EHR savings as part of its effort to be revenue neutral. And more privacy protections are needed to make those savings a reality.”

 The paper, “Privacy and Security in the Implementation of Health Information Technology (Electronic Health Records): U.S. and EU Compared,” was co-authored by Janine Hiller and Matthew McMullen of Virginia Tech and Wade Chumney of Georgia Tech. The paper is forthcoming from the Boston University Journal of Science and Technology Law.

New director named at Atlanta Advanced Technology Development Center

Thursday, July 22nd, 2010
Nina Sawczuk

Nina Sawczuk

ATLANTA – Nina Sawczuk, currently assistant director of the Atlanta Advanced Technology Development Center (ATDC) will take over as director of startup services and manager of the ATDC in August.

Sawczuk was a co-founder of Zygogen, which sold Zebrafish embryos researchers used to help develop drugs.

Zygogen filed for bankruptcy in 2009 following a patent infringement lawsuit, which the company decided would be too expensive to fight legally.

Previously, Sawczuk held drug discovery, consulting and business development roles with companies in the Research Triangle, Boston, and Southern California.

ATDC provides space, mentoring, and contacts for Atlanta startups. Nearly a year ago, ATDC opened its doors to a greater number of companies as it merged with teh Georgia Tech VentureLab program and the state SBIR assistance program. It also manages the Georgia Tech Edison Fund.

Qualcomm establishes augmented reality game studio at GA Tech

Thursday, July 1st, 2010

GA TechATLANTA – Qualcomm Inc. (NASDAQ:QCOM) has joined forces with the Georgia Institute of Technology  to establish the Qualcomm Augmented Reality Game Studio, a research and design center aimed at pioneering new advancements in mobile gaming and interactive media.

Located on Georgia Tech’s Atlanta campus, the game studio will build upon Qualcomm’s newly announced augmented reality platform and related graphics technologies to produce new application concepts and prototypes.

We’ve been continually impressed by the work flowing out of Georgia Tech’s specialized labs focused on music, games, and other cutting edge areas. Georgia, particularly the Atlanta area, has become one of the Southeast’s major game development hubs.

“Georgia Tech continues to be at the forefront of augmented reality innovation,” said Matt Grob, senior vice president of engineering and head of corporate research and development at Qualcomm. “For more than 12 years, the university’s Augmented Environments Lab has been researching ways to enhance a user’s senses by creating interactive computing environments.

“Now, with Qualcomm’s new augmented reality platform, we are working together to further advance the user experience by extending virtual gaming experiences into the real world.”

The Qualcomm Augmented Reality Game Studio will be led by acclaimed augmented reality researcher and Associate Professor of Interactive Computing Dr. Blair MacIntyre, director of Georgia Tech’s Augmented Environments Lab at its GVU Center.

“Powerful processors and sophisticated graphics engines in today’s mobile devices have only recently reached the point where they can meet the computing requirements for augmented reality,” said MacIntyre.

“By collaborating with Qualcomm, we’ll have access to both the high-end hardware and core augmented reality technology that will enable us to push the envelope in game development. We are very excited to work with Qualcomm as we explore new frontiers in augmented reality gaming.”

Georgia Tech’s Digital Lounge
GVU Center

Contact Tech Journal South Editor and writer Allan Maurer: Allan at TechJournalSouth dot com.

Research could lead to new diagnostics, treatments for atherosclerosis

Wednesday, June 23rd, 2010

ATLANTA–A new animal model of atherosclerosis has allowed researchers to identify a host of genes turned on or off during the initial stages of the process, before a plaque appears in the affected blood vessel.

The model is the first to definitively show that disturbances in the patterns of blood flow in an artery determine where atherosclerosis will later appear, says senior author Hanjoong Jo, PhD, Ada Lee and Pete Correll professor in the Wallace H. Coulter Department of Biomedical Engineering at Georgia Tech and Emory University.

The first author of the paper is Chih-Wen Ni, a graduate student in biomedical engineering.

Atherosclerosis describes a process where the arterial walls thicken and harden, because of a gradual build-up of white blood cells, lipids and cholesterol. This process can lead to plaque formation, and eventually to heart attacks and strokes.

Jo says his team’s results could provide insight into how aerobic exercise, known to provide protection against atherosclerosis, improves the patterns of blood flow and encourages protective genes to turn on in blood vessels.

Scientists have previously observed that atherosclerosis occurs preferentially in branched or curved regions of arteries, because of the “disturbed flow” branches and curves create. Constant, regular flow of blood appears to promote healthy blood vessels, while low or erratic flow can lead to disease.

The standard laboratory model of atherosclerosis has scientists feeding a high-fat diet to mice with mutations in a gene (ApoE) involved in removing fat and cholesterol from the blood. Even then, atherosclerosis usually takes a few months to develop. In these models, clogs in a mouse’s arteries tend to appear in certain places, such as the aortic arch, but flow patterns are set up at birth and thus are poor gauges of cause and effect, Jo says.

“We have developed a model where we disturb blood flow in the carotid artery by partial ligation, and atherosclerosis appears within two weeks,” he says. “This rapid progression allows us to demonstrate cause and effect, and to examine the landmark events at the beginning of the process.”

Jo says that endothelial cells, which form the inner lining of blood vessels, are equipped with sensors that detect changes in fluid flow.

“Disturbed flow is what causes the endothelial cells to become inflamed,” he says.

The inflammation resulting from “bad flow” conditions in a stretch of artery causes white blood cells to accumulate there, followed by buildup of cholesterol and lipids and plaque formation.

Just 48 hours after blood flow in the carotid arteries was disturbed, Ni and colleagues dissected the carotid arteries from the mice and used genome-wide microarray technology to identify hundreds of genes that were turned on or off in the endothelial cells.

In past experiments, scientists grew endothelial cells in dishes to probe how different patterns of fluid flow affected their patterns of genes. However, growing cells in dishes alters them enough that many of the genes Jo’s team found have not been identified before in this context.

For example, the team showed that the gene LMO4 – not previously known to be involved in atherosclerosis — is turned on in their mouse model and also in human coronary arteries. Scientists studying breast cancer think LMO4 is involved in tumor migration and invasion, making an interesting parallel between atherosclerosis and cancer, Jo says.

He says his laboratory is now probing which of the newly identified genes are most important in atherosclerosis and searching for ways to manipulate them with drugs or genetic techniques, with an eye towards possible diagnostic and pharmaceutical applications.

The research was supported by the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute, the Ada Lee and Pete Correll Professorship at Emory and Georgia Tech, and the World Class University project at Ewha Womans University in South Korea.

The results were published June 15 in Blood, the journal of the American Society of Hematology.

Now you can use your iPhone as a personal back-up band

Tuesday, June 15th, 2010

By Allan Maurer

Lot’s of us like to sing, but most of us confine our warbling to the shower or singing to the radio in the car. Now, however, thanks to a “reverse karaoke” application for the iPhone developed by Atlanta-based Khush, you can sing into your iPhone and play it back with the kinds of vocal effects that make professionals sound so hot.

Using artificial intelligence, the application, called LaDiDa, analyzes the voice of the person singing into the phone and plays it back with appropriate music.

Prerna Gupta

Love to sing? There’s an app for that. Khush CEO Prerna Gupta sings into her iPhone demonstrating the LaDiDa application.

Prerna Gupta, Khush CEO, chatted with us and demonstrated the application in the lobby of the Atlanta Technology Development Center.

One of Shotput Venture’s firms

Gupta, who says, “I’ve been singing my whole life,” sounded good without any backing. She sang some instantly made-up lyrics into her iPhone, and seconds later, played it back with perfect musical accompaniment.

(Here’s a demonstration see: How it works); for a duet of her singing a Bollywood tune with inventor of the technology Dr. Parag Chorida, director of the Georgia Tech Music Intelligence Lab and Gupta’s spouse, see Bollywood Duet.

The Music Intelligence Lab is working on some of the most unusual projects we’ve heard about anywhere.

LaDiDa

LaDiDa is the first product made by Khu.sh

Khush was founded in May 2009 as one of Shotput Ventures first class of eight companies. It raised a total so far of about $129,000 from a Shotput seed investment, a grant from Georgia Tech’s VentureLab, and an angel investment from Rackspace executive Pat Matthews.

LaDiDa is the company’s first product, but likely won’t be its last. It’s already selling briskly through the Apple iTunes store where it sells for $3 and Apple takes a buck of that.

The technology for the application took about two semesters to develop and commercializing it through the iTunes store took only two months.

We can all make music

Gupta says the app “Really pushes what the iPhone can do.” It required considerable testing to get something complicated but light.

Everyone of the eight people on the Khush team have credentials in both music and technology, Gupta tells us.

KhushBut many of the rest of us may not be so well trained when it comes to belting out a tune. When we used to do live karaoke, we warned the audience, “People turn off the hot water in the shower when we sing.”

State-of-the-art algorithms analyze the pitch and structure of the vocal input, and use that information to compose a unique accompaniment in real-time that matches the song. Khush is also working on pitch and tempo detection algorithms to help novice singers sound better.

A weird blip in music history

The application uses pitch correction and reverb features to help those who are not natural vocalists.

“Giving people the vocal effects all the musicians use now makes a big difference,” says Gupta.

Khush’s in-house composer, Alex Rae, has developed a collection of rich sounds arranged into different styles, such as E Piano Pop, Rhythm Synth Pop, Dub Tone, Underground Rap, Tasty Breaks and Dirty South.

Interviewing Prerna Gupta

TechView Atlanta reporter interviewing Prerna Gupta at Georgia Tech’s Advanced Technology Development Center in Atlanta.

”The last 50 years are a weird blip in music history,” says Gupta. Most of the music made in the last five decades has been by professionals.

“But look back and before that, people were making music from the time they were small children. This technology can help people tap back into that very natural thing. You just use your voice and create professional sounding music. I think we’ll see a major transformation over the next ten years.”

Gupta says LaDiDa’s goal is to develop an ecosystem in which artists can sell their styles and generate revenues from their musical content.

”Khush” is a Hindu word that means “happy,” and Gupta says it is appropriate for her company because, “Music is one of the fundamental things that make people happy.”

Reprinted from our sister publication, www.TechViewAtlanta.com

Georgia Tech research may lead to replacing silicon in transistors

Friday, June 11th, 2010

Scientists Strive to Replace Silicon with Graphene on Nanocircuitry

ATLANTA – Georgia Tech scientists have made a breakthrough toward creating nanocircuitry on graphene, widely regarded as the most promising candidate to replace silicon as the building block of transistors.

They have devised a simple and quick one-step process based on thermochemical nanolithography (TCNL) for creating nanowires, tuning the electronic properties of reduced graphene oxide on the nanoscale and thereby allowing it to switch from being an insulating material to a conducting material.

The technique works with multiple forms of graphene and is poised to become an important finding for the development of graphene electronics. The research appears in the June 11, 2010, issue of the journal Science.

Scientists who work with nanocircuits are enthusiastic about graphene because electrons meet with less resistance when they travel along graphene compared to silicon and because today’s silicon transistors are nearly as small as allowed by the laws of physics.

Graphene also has the edge due to its thickness – it’s a carbon sheet that is a single atom thick. While graphene nanoelectronics could be faster and consume less power than silicon, no one knew how to produce graphene nanostructures on such a reproducible or scalable method. That is until now.

“We’ve shown that by locally heating insulating graphene oxide, both the flakes and epitaxial varieties, with an atomic force microscope tip, we can write nanowires with dimensions down to 12 nanometers. And we can tune their electronic properties to be up to four orders of magnitude more conductive. We’ve seen no sign of tip wear or sample tearing,” said Elisa Riedo, associate professor in the School of Physics at the Georgia Institute of Technology.

On the macroscale, the conductivity of graphene oxide can be changed from an insulating material to a more conductive graphene-like material using large furnaces.

Now, the research team used TCNL to increase the temperature of reduced graphene oxide at the nanoscale, so they can draw graphene-like nanocircuits. They found that when it reached 130 degrees Celsius, the reduced graphene oxide began to become more conductive.

“So the beauty of this is that we’ve devised a simple, robust and reproducible technique that enables us to change an insulating sample into a conducting nanowire. These properties are the hallmark of a productive technology,” said Paul Sheehan, head of the Surface Nanoscience and Sensor Technology Section at the Naval Research Laboratory in Washington, D.C.

Atlanta’s ATDC Startup Showcase set for May 24

Thursday, May 13th, 2010
TechSquare sign

The ATDC is located in the Research Building at Atlanta's Technology Square

ATLANTA – Georgia Tech’s Advanced Technology Development Center expects more than 1,000 technology leaders, university leaders, investors, and aspiring entrepreneurs to attend its 2010 Startup Showcase at The Georgia Tech Hotel & Conference Center May 24.

Each year ATDC member companies who have attained rigorous growth milestones are selected to graduate from the startup incubator.

We were impressed with the variety of startup cultures and styles ATDC hosts when we visited recently. Offices of its startups range from the precisely neat to the creative clutter of long hours fueled by caffeine and sugar.

We also heard praise for the way ATDC has opened its doors to many more companies, including all of those incubated by Shotput Ventures. (See: Atlanta’s Shotput Ventures firms all joining ATDC).

Stephen Fleming, vice provost and director of the ATDC commented on the upcoming ceremony, “We are proud of this group of startup companies and the level of success they have achieved; they are representative of the types of companies that have been successful during the first 30 years of our existence.

“As we open our doors to a larger number of quality entrepreneurs and startup companies we believe that the number of companies that we can assist will grow exponentially.”

The 2010 graduating companies are:

  • CommerceV3, a provider of an order-management system that allows users to create, launch, and grow customized web storefronts;
  • Endgame Systems, an organization of highly skilled information security veterans providing advanced vulnerability research programs and next-generation security solutions;
  • Izenda, a company that delivers a fully-integrable add-on to software developers that gives end users the ability to create and customize reports; and
  • PureWire, a web security software-as-a-service vendor that secures business and social interactions on the Web.

The Advanced Technology Development Center (ATDC) is a startup accelerator that helps Georgia technology entrepreneurs launch and build successful companies. Founded in 1980, ATDC has graduated more than 120 companies, which together have raised more than a billion dollars in outside financing.

ATDC has provided business incubation and acceleration services to hundreds of Georgia startups—most of which are not based on Georgia Tech research, but which benefit from the close proximity to the university.

Recently ATDC expanded its mission by merging with Georgia Tech’s VentureLab and with the Georgia SBIR Assistance Program.

For more information on the showcase event see: ATDC Startup Showcase.

Suniva called “An American Success Story” by DOE Secretary

Wednesday, May 12th, 2010

SunivaNORCROSS, GA – Department of Energy Secretary Steven Chu has called Georgia-based Suniva, which makes advanced solar cells, “An American Success Story,” on the White House blog.

The entry followed Chu’s visit to the Georgia Institute of Technology, where Suniva’s technology was developed.

Suniva evolved from the Georgia Tech University Center of Excellence in Photovoltaics (UCEP) and the research of its founding director, Dr. Ajeet Rohatgi, Suniva’s founder and CTO.

Chu wrote in his blog post that “This center and this company are powerful examples of how clean energy technology can drive job creation in the U.S. and increase our competitiveness.”

Suniva has exemplified the economic growth ideals put forth by the Obama administration by exporting production while creating U.S. jobs. Last year, Suniva exported more than 90 percent of its product to Asia and Europe.

“The U.S. needs to jump back into the clean energy race and play to win. That is the work we have started with investments like the Recovery Act and companies like Suniva,” continued Secretary Chu in his blog post. “Suniva has created more than 150 clean energy jobs manufacturing high-efficiency silicon solar cells and modules, using technology developed at UCEP.

Suniva, which makes silicon solar cells and modules of higher efficiency than others, ranked #2 in The Wall Street Journal’s Top 10 Venture-Backed Clean Technology Companies in 2010.

The company has also been one of TechJournal South’s Tech 50, and was a presenting company at the first Southeast Venture Conference in 2007.

For the full post on Suniva see: Success Story

Previously on Techjournal South:

Suniva has sunny outlook on solar cells

Suniva beams in $75M round

Suniva negotiating for $141M DOE loan

Telecommunications standards group looking at smart device security

Tuesday, April 13th, 2010

By Allan Maurer

Jeff Smith Headshot

Jeff Smith, CTO, Numerex, chair, TIA TR-50 standards committee

ATLANTA – Smart devices, such as smart meters, home automation systems, remote monitoring and other marvels of modern technology can make our lives easier, save money and energy and even keep us safer. But they could also provide sophisticated ways to invade our privacy.

The Telecommunications Industry Association (TIA)  Standards Committee on Smart Device Communications (TR-50) is meeting with experts from the Georgia Institute of Technology for the second day Tuesday (4/13) to gain perspective on possible standards gaps in smart device communications.

Dr. Jeff Smith, Chief Technology Officer at Numerex(Nasdaq:NMRX) and chair of the TIA standards committee, told us, “Part of our mission is to establish standards within the industry to make sure that when people transmit data back and forth, it’s not only economical, but also secure.”

Georgia Tech, through its Information Security Center and its Center for Experimental Research in Computer Systems, and the Smart Antenna Research Laboratory, is a leader in research in these areas, Dr. Smith notes, just as Atlanta itself has a significant telecommunications industry.

The intent is to stimulate an Smart-Device-Communications-centered discussion about possible standards gaps, and areas for which TIA could demonstrate global leadership and expertise.

The discussion will look not just at standards to ensure not only that smart grids are operational, but also that they protect personal privacy, says Dr. Smith.

“People don’t think about security with things such as smart meters, home automation, and remote health monitoring, but each is an opportunity for folks to be able to get at your personal data and do nefarious things,” says Dr. Smith.

The data smart grids provide, for instance, could let people know when someone is home, what devices are being turned on and off and other information. “As more devices are deployed, we’ll see a larger awareness of the vulnerabilities within the infrastructure,” Dr. Smith says.

“Georgia Tech is leading in looking into these types of issues, making sure we do things in the industry that protects peoples’ privacy.”

TIA, he adds, “Has taken on the challenge” and wants to take a leading role in developing appropriate standards globally.

Speakers at the meeting are addressing issues such as the security aspects of smart devices, cloud computing as it applies to them, and the emerging technologies within smart device infrastructures.