2020: EuroSys Roger Needham PhD Award
2019: NSA Best Scientific Cybersecurity Paper Competition Honorable Mention: Meltdown
2019: Open Exploit Award: Meltdown and Spectre
2019: S&P Distinguished Paper Award - Spectre
2018: CSAW Best Paper Award - Meltdown
2018: Pwnie Award for Best Privilege Escalation Bug - Meltdown
2018: Pwnie Awardfor Most Innovative Research - Spectre
Dr. Michael Schwarz is tenured faculty at CISPA with a focus on microarchitectural side-channel attacks and system security. He obtained his PhD with the title "Software-based Side-Channel Attacks and Defenses in Restricted Environments" in 2019 from Graz University of Technology (advised by Daniel Gruss). He holds two master's degrees, one in computer science and one in software engineering with a strong focus on security. Michael is a regular speaker at both academic and hacker conferences (7 times Black Hat, CCC, Blue Hat, etc.). He was part of one of the research teams that found the Meltdown, Spectre, Fallout, and LVI vulnerabilities, as well as the ZombieLoad vulnerability. He was also part of the KAISER patch, the basis for Meltdown countermeasures now deployed in every modern operating system under names such as KPTI or KVA Shadow.
IEEE Symposium on Security and Privacy (S&P)
LVI: Hijacking Transient Execution through Microarchitectural Load Value Injection
European Symposium on Security and Privacy Workshops
Nethammer: Inducing Rowhammer Faults through Network Requests
ACM Conference on Computer and Communications Security (CCS)
Fallout: Leaking Data on Meltdown-resistant CPUs
ACM Conference on Computer and Communications Security (CCS)
ZombieLoad: Cross-Privilege-Boundary Data Sampling
ACM Conference on Computer and Communications Security (CCS)
Page Cache Attacks
IEEE Symposium on Security and Privacy (S&P)
Spectre Attacks: Exploiting Speculative Execution
European Symposium on Research in Computer Security (ESORICS)
NetSpectre: Read Arbitrary Memory over Network
GI International Conference on Detection of Intrusions and Malware and Vulnerability Assessment (DIMVA)
Practical Enclave Malware with Intel SGX
Usenix Security Symposium (USENIX-Security)
A Systematic Evaluation of Transient Execution Attacks and Defenses.
ACM ASIA Conference on Computer and Communications Security (AsiaCCS)
Use-After-FreeMail: Generalizing the Use-After-Free Problem and Applying it to Email Services