Luke Macpherson Wins John Lions Award For 2002
[Posted November 12, 2002 by ris]
| From: |
| Gordon Hubbard <gordon@customtech.com.au> |
| To: |
| pr@lwn.net |
| Subject: |
| [PRESS RELEASE] Luke Macpherson Wins John Lions Award For 2002 |
| Date: |
| Tue, 12 Nov 2002 12:24:18 +1100 |
PRESS RELEASE
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Luke Macpherson Wins John Lions Award For 2002
SYDNEY, Australia -- 6 November 2002 -- The Australian UNIX and Open
Systems
User Group (AUUG, Inc.) today announced that Luke Macpherson has won the
John Lions Award for 2002 for his work on IP Spoofing and Aliasing for
the
BSD Network Stack.
The award commemorates the work of John Lions, who brought UNIX to
Australia, wrote the famous commentary on the 6th Edition UNIX kernel,
and
founded AUUG in 1975.
The award is given based on a piece of work of relevance to open systems
that is carried out by a full-time honours or post-graduate student. The
award includes a one year membership of AUUG, and a cash prize of
$1,000,
taken from a fund established by AUUG, USENIX and an anonymous donor.
Luke's work was to develop Dynamic IP (internet protocol) aliasing for
OpenBSD, a technology which allows one computer to initiate and accept
connections on behalf of any device on the same network in a manner
which is
transparent to the other communicating party.
The primary application of this technology is to enable internet
firewalls
to provide fine-grained filtering of internet connections. By enabling
firewalls to control not only the source and destination addresses of
connections, but also the content of individual connections, the
security
provided by internet firewalls can be significantly improved.
David Purdue, speaking on behalf of the Lions Award Committee, said, "We
chose this work because of its usefulness, its relevance to open
systems,
and the fact that it could promote the use of the open source OpenBSD
operating system in security applications."
In response to receiving the award, Luke said, "I am very pleased to
receive
the John Lions award for research work in open systems, both because I
have
great respect for the influence John Lions has had on the field of open
systems research, and because I am aware of the high standard of systems
research being done by other Australian university students."
More details on the Lions award can be found at:
http://www.auug.org.au/awards/lions/
An in-depth explanation of Luke's work can be found at:
http://www.cse.unsw.edu.au/~lukem/thesis/
###
About AUUG Incorporated
AUUG Inc. is the Australian UNIX and Open Systems User Group, a
professional
association for end users, corporations, developers and vendors that
promotes UNIX® and related systems, including Linux and BSD. Dating from
1975, AUUG is a national body with chapters that organise local
activities
in most capital cities.
Visit http://www.auug.org.au/ or contact AUUG at:
AUUG Inc.
PO Box 7071
Baulkham Hills BC NSW 2153
Australia
Free Call 1800 625 655, Fax 02 8824 9522
International: Tel +61 2 8824 9511, Fax +61 2 8824 9522
E-mail: auug@auug.org.au
ACN A00 166 36N, ABN 15 645 981 718
Press Contact
Gordon Hubbard
Treasurer and Press Secretary, AUUG Inc.
<Gordon.Hubbard@auug.org.au>
Tel: 02 9659 9590
###
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