Gedare Bloom
Assistant Professor
Computer Science EECS Department
Howard University
United States of America
Biography
Dr. Bloom is an assistant professor in the Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science at Howard University where he directs the Embedded Systems Security Lab. His research expertise is computer system security with particular focus on real-time embedded systems that have measurable lifetimes in decades. The techniques he applies to solve problems along the hardware-software interface range from computer architecture, computer security, cryptography, operating systems, and real-time analysis. He is also a maintainer for the RTEMS open-source hard real-time OS, which is used in robotics frameworks, unmanned vehicles, satellites and space probes, automotive, defense, building automation, medical devices, industrial controllers, and more.
Research Interest
Safety and Security of Cyber-Physical Systems, Automotive Security, Device Security in the Internet of Things
Publications
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Y. Ren, G. Parmer, T. Georgiev, and G. Bloom CBufs: Efficient, System-wide Memory Management and Sharing, 2016 ACM SIGPLAN International Symposium on Memory Management (ISMM'16), June 2016.
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S. Gadia, C. Artho, and G. Bloom, Verifying Nested Lock Priority Inheritance in RTEMS with Java Pathfinder, 18th International Conference on Formal Engineering Methods (ICFEM '16), November 2016.
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C. Young, J. Zambreno, and G. Bloom, Towards a Fail-Operational Intrusion Detection System for In-Vehicle Networks, 1st Workshop on Security and Dependability of Critical Embedded Real-Time Systems (CERTS '16), November 2016.