Cybersecurity summer

Release Date: July 11, 2022

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Murray.
“As data breaches continue to regularly make headlines, the students who learn these skills will have better career options and will be prepared to effectively navigate our world of rapidly evolving technology.”
University at Buffalo School of Management

BUFFALO, N.Y. —  In a world gone digital, 42 tech-savvy teens came together for a free week of hands-on cybersecurity activities at the University at Buffalo’s GenCyber camp.

This year’s camp, held from June 27 to July 1, marked the return to an in-person event for the first time since 2019. The COVID-19 pandemic sidelined the program in 2020, and it was held virtually in 2021.

The goal of GenCyber is to encourage students to pursue career opportunities in cybersecurity, a profession that’s growing in demand as government agencies, businesses and other organizations face growing cyberthreats.

“Professionals with computer security skills are in high demand, making the field an attractive career option,” says David Murray, clinical professor of management science and systems in the UB School of Management. “As data breaches continue to regularly make headlines, the students who learn these skills will have better career options and will be prepared to effectively navigate our world of rapidly evolving technology.”

Each day, a capacity crowd of middle and high school students from 19 area schools learned about a wide range of cybersecurity topics.

The campers heard presentations from industry professionals, built a computer network using credit-card-sized Raspberry Pi computers and defended the network from a simulated cyberattack.

They also learned about Google hacking, HTML, encryption, web servers, system administration, computer virtualization and best practices for passwords.

Students who successfully completed the camp received a certificate of achievement at an awards presentation Friday afternoon.

GenCyber is presented by the UB School of Management, the UB School of Engineering and Applied Sciences, and the Center of Excellence in Information Systems Assurance Research and Education (CEISARE) at UB, with sponsorship from the NSA, the National Science Foundation and businesses.

Students who successfully completed UB’s 2022 GenCyber camp are:

Spencer Brace of Amherst High School; Abigail Smith and Olivia Smith of Buffalo Seminary; Siddharth Honwad and Emma Zhang of Casey Middle School; Etienne Bohlen, Duncan Schiff, Tristan Tortora, Sebastian Wick-Panek and Casey Glynn of City Honors; Luke Falzarano, Laura Kreher, and Saachvir Singh of Clarence High School; Scott Stout and Tracy Wu of Clarence Middle School; Evan Miller of East Aurora High School; Morgan Logan of Hamburg Middle; Tamira Ganapathy and Alexei Goubski of Heim Middle; and Sangam Baraily, Sayma Chowdhury, Ahsha Nath and Ahsanul Jidan of Math Science Technology High School.

Also Mya Schneider, Henry Baczkiewicz, Nathan Kim, Carol Li and Paul Tu of Mill Middle School; Giuliana Bishouty of Nativity School of Mary; Jackson Liao-Cheng of Nichols; Alexander Glynn of Olmsted School; Colleen Coffey of Sleepy Hollow High School; Micah Brookshire of Sweet Home High School; Joshua Smith of Tonawanda Middle; Selena Han, Noah Perras, Santhana Sivaselvan, Grace Wang and Michael Wang of Transit Middle School; and Connor Angiel, Swapnil Roy and Om Balkundi of Williamsville North High School.

The UB School of Management is recognized for its emphasis on real-world learning, community and economic impact, and the global perspective of its faculty, students and alumni. The school also has been ranked by Bloomberg Businessweek, Forbes and U.S. News & World Report for the quality of its programs and the return on investment it provides its graduates. For more information about the UB School of Management, visit management.buffalo.edu.

Media Contact Information

Contact
Kevin Manne
Associate Director of Communications
School of Management
716-645-5238
kjmanne@buffalo.edu