Visit of Prof. Dr. José Alexandre D’Abruzzo Pereira

In August we received the visit of Prof. Dr. José Alexandre D’Abruzzo Pereira, from the University of Coimbra. His research interests include security and vulnerability detection, static code analysis, software project management, databases, software quality, cloud computing, and self-adaptive systems.

Lecture information:

Title: “Software Security Characterization through Static Data Analysis – Results and Future Research Direction”

Abstract:

Modern enterprises rely on software systems to run their business: financial, healthcare, government, and e-commerce, among many others. However, many systems are deployed with vulnerabilities caused by a design flaw or an implementation bug. The malicious exploitation of those security vulnerabilities may lead to various problems with financial or legal implications. Static Code Analysis (SCA) is a vulnerability detection technique that reports potential problems (alerts) without requiring the execution of the code. This is done through the use of Static Analysis Tools (SATs). However, such tools are frequently too expensive for most organizations, and they either report many false positives or false negatives. Consequently, developers are required to spend a considerable amount of time analyzing the reported cases without being sure that all vulnerabilities have been detected. 

In this talk, I will present techniques to characterize of software code units (e.g., functions) from a security vulnerability perspective, making use of static data from the source code. The used dataset contains vulnerabilities from five open-source C/C++ projects (Linux Kernel, Mozilla, Xen, Apache httpd, and glibc), and static data (Software Metrics (SMs) and alerts from SATs) extracted from the vulnerable and neutral versions of the code. Vulnerabilities are organized into categories, devised based on the improper or lack of use of the OWASP best practices. Additionally, I will present the future research direction using static data to characterize software code units.

Short Bio:

José D’Abruzzo Pereira holds a Ph.D. in Informatics Engineering from the University of Coimbra (UC), is currently an Invited Assistant Professor at the University of Coimbra, and a member of the Software and System Engineering (SSE) group at CISUC. His research interests include security and vulnerability detection, static code analysis, software project management, databases, software quality, cloud computing, and self-adaptive systems. He received a MSc in Information Technology and Software Engineering from the University of Coimbra and Carnegie Mellon University and a B.Sc. in Computer Science from the State University of Campinas – Brazil (Unicamp). He is also acting as a professor in the Specialization in Software Engineering at the State University of Campinas – Brazil (Unicamp).

LASER in SBQS – 2023

SBQS – XXII Simpósio Brasileiro de Qualidade de Software

Laser had the privilege of having two works accepted at the SBQS conference hosted by the University of Brasília (UNB) on November 23rd. 

Technical track 

Sara das Mercês, a doctoral student, present one paper entitled "A Case Study on Data Science Processes in an Academia-Industry Collaboration".


WTDQS - XXI WORKSHOP DE TESES E DISSERTAÇÕES EM QUALIDADE DE SOFTWARE

Milene Rigolin, a doctoral student, present online his work entitled "Ethical issues in continuous experimentation".



Sara das Mercês at conference

Visit of Profa. Anna Wiedemann

In September we received the visit of Professor Anna Wiedemann. She is a professor at the Institute of Business Information Technology at the University of Applied Sciences Zurich (ZHAW) and has worked mainly in ​​DevOps.

Lecture information:

Title: Achieving Product Orientation in DevOps Teams

Abstract: Changes in IT organization and technology environments make it necessary to adapt and review how mission-critical IT functions align with firm strategy. IT functions increasingly use cross-functional teams to manage the lifecycle of digital solutions. As cross-functional teams begin to alter how we develop and maintain software, they may also result in control–alignment misfits that diminish the efficacy of functional project and operations controls. With the help of qualitative research methods, we examine how the integration of product-oriented cross-functional teams challenges and transforms the IT function. We apply grounded theory and derive models that give insights into how alignment between development and operations can be achieved in DevOps teams within the IT function.

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