Press Release
Narus Appoints Leading Academics to Narus Research
Fellows
Industry Luminaries to Collaborate With Narus in Development of Next-Generation Security Products
Mountain View, Calif., June 21, 2005—Narus,
Inc., the world’s leader in providing Unified IP Management
and Security Platforms, today announced an industry-leading corporate
initiative to develop next-generation security products through
the newly created Narus Research Fellows program. The group,
which comprises academics and leading researchers from esteemed
universities and companies in the United States and Europe, will
collaborate on developing and testing security products to protect
carriers from cyber-terrorism.
A real and constant threat, cyberterrorism wreaks havoc on the
world’s carrier networks and computer systems. In fact,
GartnerG2 estimates that 90 percent of attacks take advantage
of known security flaws or problems. Narus is addressing the
threat of increasingly advanced cyberattacks by leveraging the
expertise of its Narus Research Fellows. Seven academics and
researchers from Cambridge University, Rutgers University, University
of Minnesota, University of Florida, and University of California
at Davis and San Diego will co-develop next-generation products,
further strengthening Narus’ leadership in the field of
IP management and security.
“In cooperation with the Narus Advanced Technology Team,
the Narus Research Fellows will jointly research, benchmark and
deliver the most innovative and complete solutions to satisfy
current and future security expectations. The combination of
next-generation algorithms and Narus’ highly distributed
scalable architectures and systems will protect wired and wireless
carrier networks against even the most complex attacks,” said
Antonio Nucci, chief technology officer of Narus, Inc. “With
the collaborative expertise of some of the world’s most
brilliant security scientists, Narus customers will know they
have the most advanced security available on their networks.”
Members of the Narus Research Fellows include:
- Marco Ajmone Marsan, professor, Electrical
Department of Politecnico di Torino, Turin, Italy — Ajmone
Marsan has been the Director of the Institute for Electronics,
Information and Telecommunications Engineering of the National
Research Council since September 2002. He has been the principal
investigator in national and international research projects
dealing with telecommunications networks and was awarded the
grade of Institute of Electrical and Electronic Engineers (IEEE)
Fellow. Ajmone Marsan’s current interests are in performance
evaluation of communication networks and their protocols.
- Dr. Chen-Nee
Chuah, professor, Electrical and Computer Engineering
Department at the University of California, Davis — Chuah
currently leads the Robust and Ubiquitous Networking (RUBINET)
Research Group at UC Davis. Chuah received the Outstanding
Junior Faculty Award from the College of Engineering at UC
Davis in October 2004 and previously the NSF CAREER Award in
2003 for her research on robust, secure and stable routing.
Chuah’s research area interests are in computer networking,
distributed systems, wireless/mobile communications, multimedia,
network/traffic monitoring and performance modeling.
- Dr. Rene
Cruz, professor, Department of Electrical and Computer
Engineering at the University of California, San Diego — Cruz
received an NSF Presidential Young Investigator Award in 1991
and was awarded the grade of Fellow of the IEEE for developing
a network calculus for characterization on traffic of packet
networks. Cruz’s research area interests are in design
and performance analysis of communication networks, with an
emphasis on high-speed wireless and optical systems, scheduling,
routing, and network calculus.
- Dr. Muthu Muthukrishnan, professor,
Department of Computer and Information Sciences at Rutgers
University — Muthukrishnan
has published more than 100 papers and holds more than 10 patents.
He has worked at the University of Warwick in the United Kingdom,
Bell Labs and AT&T Research, where he built a location
service for AT&T Wireless over the entire U.S. network.
Muthukrishnan’s research area interests are in algorithms,
databases and analyzing massive amounts (“streams”)
of data.
- Dr. Dapeng Oliver Wu, professor, Electrical
and Computer Engineering Department at University of Florida — During
his career, Wu served as TPC member of more than 20 conferences
in networking, was an associate editor for the IEEE Transactions
on Vehicular Technology and for the International Journal of
Ad Hoc and Ubiquitous Computing, and visited Fujitsu Laboratories
of America in Sunnyvale, Calif., where he conducted research
on architectures and traffic management algorithms in the Internet
and wireless networks for multimedia applications. Wu’s
research area interests are in networking, communications,
multimedia, signal processing, and information and network
security.
- Dr. Zhi-Li Zhang, associate professor, Computer
Science and Engineering at the University of Minnesota — During
his career, Zhang received the National Science Foundation
CAREER Award in 1997, the prestigious McKnight Land-Grant Professorshipand
the George Taylor Distinguished Research Awardat
the University of Minnesota, and the Miller Visiting Professorship
atMiller Institute for Basic Sciences, University
of California,Berkeley. Zhang held visiting
positions at Sprint Advanced Technology Labs, IBM T.J. Watson
Research Center, Fujitsu Labs of America, Microsoft Research
China, and at the French National Institute for Research in
Computer Science and Control. Zhang’s research area interests
are in computer communication and networks, especiallyQOS,
routing and security issues in the Internet, multimedia and
real-timesystems, and modeling and performance
evaluation of computer andcommunication systems.
- Dr. Gianluca Iannaccone, research scientist
at Intel Research in Cambridge University, Cambridge, U.K.
(and will also serve as an observer of the Narus Research Fellows) — During
his career, Iannaccone published several papers and served
as TPC member of several conferences in networking. Before
joining Intel Cambridge, Iannaccone was a research scientist
at Sprint Advanced Technology Labs in Burlingame, Calif., where
he worked in the IP Research group. Iannaccone’s research
area interests are in network performance measurements, loss
inference methods and survivability of IP networks.
About Narus, Inc.
Narus is the leader in real-time traffic intelligence for large IP networks, and is the only company that provides security, intercept and traffic management solutions within a single, flexible system. With Narus, service providers, governments and large enterprises around the world can immediately detect, analyze, mitigate and target any unwanted, unwarranted or malicious traffic. Narus provides its customers with complete, real-time insight into all of their IP traffic from the network to the applications. Combined with the ability to enable numerous actions, Narus customers have the ability to take the most appropriate actions quickly.
Narus’ system protects and manages the largest IP networks around the world including AT&T, KT (Korea), KDDI (Japan), Telecom Egypt, Reliance (India), Saudi Telecom, US Cellular and Pakistan Telecom Authority. Narus is headquartered in Mountain View, California with regional offices around the world. For more information, please visit www.narus.com.
Media Contact
Kathleen Shanahan
Boca Communications
T: 415.570.1405