Sharon Goldberg   Home / Resume / Publications / Photos
  

goldbe||at||princeton||edu

F210-K EQuad
Princeton University
Princeton, NJ 08544

Milonga |   Tanghetto


  I’m graduating! Starting August 2009, I’ll be a postdoctoral researcher at Microsoft Research, New England. In August 2010, I’ll be joining the Computer Science Department at Boston University as an assistant professor.   (old application)

I am a Ph.D. student in Electrical Engineering at Princeton University. My research focuses on finding practical solutions to problems in network security, by leveraging formal techniques from cryptography and game theory. My advisors are Jennifer Rexford and Boaz Barak. I've also been visiting the crypto group at IBM Research (on and off) since May 2007, and in summer 2008 I was an intern at Cisco Research.

Since 2005, I've been an organizer of GWISE (Graduate Women in Science and Engineering) at Princeton, and of engineering outreach events for female high school students.


Recent Projects         (full publication list)
  • "Rationality and Traffic Attraction: Incentives for honestly announcing paths in BGP", with Shai Halevi, Aaron Jaggard, Vijay Ramachandran, and Rebecca Wright. SIGCOMM 2008.     full version     SIGCOMM talk     seminar talk.
  • "Path-Quality Monitoring in the Presence of Adversaries", with David Xiao, Eran Tromer, Boaz Barak and Jennifer Rexford. SIGMETRICS 2008.     full version    SIGMETRICS talk     seminar talk
  • "Protocols and Lower Bounds for Failure Localization in the Internet", with Boaz Barak and David Xiao. EUROCRYPT 2008.    full version    talk
  • “Security Vulnerabilities and Solutions for Packet Sampling”, with Jennifer Rexford. IEEE Sarnoff Symposium, Princeton, NJ, May 2007.    paper     talk

Updated June 12, 2009.
Conferences

Program Committee:    NetEcon 2009  

Attended:     FOCS 2008  SIGCOMM 2008  USENIX Security 2008  SIGMETRICS 2008  Eurocrypt 2008  CoNEXT 2007  FOCS 2007  Grace Hopper 2007   Optical Fiber Communications: OFC 2007   IPAM: Securing Cyberspace   Fields Institute: Foundations of Cryptology   SIGCOMM 2006