ICS0018 Course Guide: Difference between revisions

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=== Lectures/discussions ===
=== Lectures/discussions ===


The course will experiment with blending traditional lectures with text chat discussions. Each lecture will consist of 3-4 mini-lectures (15-20 minutes each; mostly on a single umbrella topic) alternating with 5-10 minute discussion breaks in the MS Teams text chat. We will use the latter rather that voice chat - it will accommodate more people within the limited time frame (Note: we might switch to voice chat if the actual number of partipants will be remarkably lower than initially registered - it remains to be seen). The text chat will be open throughout the lecture (everyone can write add comments and questions), but the lecturer will only be able to respond during the discussion breaks.  
The course will experiment with blending traditional lectures with text chat discussions. Each lecture will consist of 3-4 mini-lectures (15-20 minutes each; mostly on a single umbrella topic) alternating with 5-10 minute discussion breaks in the MS Teams text chat. We will use the latter rather that voice chat - it will accommodate more people within the limited time frame (Note: we might switch to voice chat if the actual number of partipants will be remarkably lower than initially registered - it remains to be seen). The text chat will be open throughout the lecture (everyone can add comments and questions), but the lecturer will only be able to respond during the discussion breaks.  


As attendance also counts towards passing the course (6 out of 8 need to be attended; see the Grading section below), the best way to ensure that you get registered is to take active part in the discussion. :)
As attendance also counts towards passing the course (6 out of 8 need to be attended; see the Grading section below), the best way to ensure that you get registered is to take active part in the discussion. :)

Revision as of 18:13, 18 January 2023

Aims of the Course

The course is primarily meant to the students of Cyber Security Engineering Bachelor's programme at Tallinn University of Technology to cover the more human-oriented aspects of cybersecurity. It is also offered to the students of partner universities under the aegis of EuroTEQ. In the 2023 Spring term it is on its maiden flight (it has been run once earlier, within the programme of the earlier independent IT College).

The main goal is to introduce social engineering (in the cybersecurity sense - the term has different meanings in other disciplines) or non-technical attacks targeting PIBKAC, or the "problem between the keyboard and the chair". The course uses the books by Christopher Hadnagy as its foundation, complementing them with writings of several other authors (see the course library) as well as the lecturers' own notes and experiences. As a mixture of technology, training/education, policy-making and some applied psychology (the list of main topics can be found at the front page, the course is relatively non-technical and can be handled without specific IT background (various experiences from the online world do help though).

According to the official learning outcomes of the course, the students will - know the essence of social engineering and its main forms and techniques; - recognize main social engineering attacks and react appropriately; - know main measures of prevention and mitigation (in technology, training and policy).

Tools/environments

In the Spring 2023 term, we will run the course in the e-learning mode (due to a significant number of distance participants from EuroTEQ). This time, we will use the IT College wiki (where you are now) for documentation, and the University's MS Teams for contact sessions (lectures/discussions and seminars). At the beginning of the course, all participants should be added to the Social Engineering group at Teams. Note: future runs of the course may switch to something else, Jitsi Meet being a likely candidate.

There are some recommendations to help keep the online communication smooth - please see the university regulations page (section "Online learning good practice") as well as some of our own points here. The contact sessions will run according to the official schedule (see the timetable below).

How do we work

Lectures/discussions

The course will experiment with blending traditional lectures with text chat discussions. Each lecture will consist of 3-4 mini-lectures (15-20 minutes each; mostly on a single umbrella topic) alternating with 5-10 minute discussion breaks in the MS Teams text chat. We will use the latter rather that voice chat - it will accommodate more people within the limited time frame (Note: we might switch to voice chat if the actual number of partipants will be remarkably lower than initially registered - it remains to be seen). The text chat will be open throughout the lecture (everyone can add comments and questions), but the lecturer will only be able to respond during the discussion breaks.

As attendance also counts towards passing the course (6 out of 8 need to be attended; see the Grading section below), the best way to ensure that you get registered is to take active part in the discussion. :)

Lectures/discussions will run throughout the course (weekly, see the timetable).

Hands-on seminars

These sessions is where Kristjan will teach some nasty tricks to you... Well, perhaps not quite, but you will receive some practical tasks in social engineering and discuss the results at these seminars. Doing the tasks successfully will result in passing the course (if your attendance level is sufficient). Yet there is another way to pass as well (read on).

The hands-on seminars will be held in the second half of the course (4 in total, see timetable below).


CotW seminars

The acronym stands for "Crook of the Week" - these seminars are meant for learning about some good historical examples of social engineering. At each of the four seminars, two students will present the rest of the crowd some infamous historical figures (so there will actually be TWO CotW-s!). Each presentation (~20 minutes) will be followed by discussion of the person, his or her feats, methods etc. A successful presentation will result in passing the course (if your attendance level is sufficient), so this is an alternate way. NB! As there are only 8 slots for presentations, the faster applicants will get them - so if you want to do a CotW presentation, let Kaido know ASAP!

Note: you need to attend 6 seminars out of 8 - whether it is 3+3, 5+1 etc (hands-on vs CotW) is up to you. Of course, you could attend all of them too... :)


Grading

The course uses the pass/fail grading, so if you

  • do the practical tasks at the hands-on seminars or
  • do a CotW presentation, and
  • attend at least 6 lectures/discussions and 6 seminars (regardless of type),

the 3 credit points will be yours.


Timetable

  • Lectures/discussions: on Wednesdays 14.00-15.30 Tallinn time, from February 1 to March 22 (8 weeks)
  • Hands-on seminars: on Wednesdays 08.15-09.45 Tallinn time, from March 1 to March 22 (4 weeks)
  • CotW seminars: on Thursdays 08.15-09.45 Tallinn time, from March 2 to March 23 (4 weeks)

All these will take place online in MS Teams.


Back to the course page