RESEARCH and DEVELOPMENT
Unlike many consulting organizations, we're deeply
commited to research, the hard (and expensive!) labor
of love needed to develop technology before it can
become a viable business tool.
Our research is largely focused on issues that are now
beginning to be faced and problems that we'll be
facing soon. Simply stated, we keep it practical. As
these problems become better understood, we release
and contribute to tools that help people to manage the
issues.
Some highlights of the work our folks have been
involved with include:
- OpenNMS
- The world's first enterprise-grade network
management platform developed under the open-source
model benefits from the expertise of key
Interhackers. More information on the project can
be found on the project's page at
SourceForge.
- Internet Privacy Project
- An ongoing research project to understand not only
how privacy works in theory, but how real systems
that are being developed are affecting privacy in
practice. This project has documented failures of
policy and technology of organizations like TRUSTe,
Toys R Us, DoubleClick, and Netscape -- not to say
"look, these guys are bad", for imperfection is part
of being human, but to say "look, here's a system
that had unintended consequences, let's learn its
lesson".
- Shibboleth -- a privacy-aware mailing list
manager
- A consequence of connecting everyone together
through the Internet is the inability for people to
work conveniently together in closed groups, without
fear of outsiders or ex-insiders interfering.
Shibboleth is a project that made this kind of
email-based collaboration possible. A formal paper
about the system was presented at the 9th USENIX
Security Symposium and the system is now available
free of charge from
SourceForge.
- DESCHALL -- The first successful
brute-force attack against DES
-
- DESCHALL was a project started by Rocke Verser to
answer a challenge posed by RSA Data Security, Inc.,
in January of 1997. Break a sample message
encrypted with DES, the US Government standard for
data encryption for 20 years, and win a prize.
Interhack founder Matt Curtin joined the project
early and helped lead the group to success in June
1997.
You'll find the results of our work published in
various journals, cited in the press, and always
available for public review and comment free of
charge. Our research site's
publications
index is the best place to look for our public
documents.