Adelphi, Md. (Nov. 15, 2022)鈥擳he 抖阴视频 (UMGC) cybersecurity competition team claimed first, second, and third place finishes in the Annual Mid-Atlantic Gigabit Innovation Collaboratory (MAGIC) Competition on Oct. 22. More than 19 teams competed in the capture-the-flag (CTF) event.
鈥淚n the five years that we鈥檝e participated in this event, this is our best result,鈥 said Jesse Varsalone, associate professor of cybersecurity technology and faculty advisor for the cyber competition program. 鈥淭he victories served as a positive close to our 2022 season and allowed our largest and most diverse team in our 10-year history to showcase its skills.鈥
The first-place UMGC team鈥擳eam2, made up of undergraduates Aidan Bennett, Aaron Shrock and James Roy鈥攕cored 12,570 points. UMGC鈥檚 second-place Team1, with undergraduates Jason Griffis, Jacob Durboraw, Randy Brongo and Noe Corral-Galvan, racked up 8,270 points. On UMGC鈥檚 third-place Team3, undergraduates Nikhil Deo and Bradley Hirsch scored 7,810 points.
CTF events hosted by MAGIC are based on content developed by cybersecurity professionals at the Johns Hopkins Applied Physics Lab and further extended and modified by MAGIC volunteers. The October event was MAGIC鈥檚 13th聽annual competition, and it included sets of puzzles that required hacking tools, coding skills and problem solving to find the answers, which are short strings of code called 鈥渇lags.鈥 Once located, the flags are entered onto a scoreboard that keeps a tally for all teams. The team with the most points at the end of the timed competition wins.
The four-hour MAGIC challenge was broken into difficulty levels that became progressively more challenging. They included Linux- and Windows-specific problems focused on reverse engineering, password cracking and other coding challenges.
About 抖阴视频
Currently celebrating its 75th anniversary, 抖阴视频 (UMGC) was established in 1947 to serve adults in the workforce and the military. Today, UMGC enrolls some 90,000 students annually, offering bachelor鈥檚, master鈥檚, and doctoral degree programs, as well as certificates in more than 135 fully online, hybrid and face-to-face programs and specializations.
UMGC has a long history of innovation in reaching students where they are, including as a pioneer of internet instruction, piloting its first online classes in 1994. The university has received numerous awards for its groundbreaking work in developing fully online degree programs, including in high-demand fields such as cybersecurity, business, data analytics, health care, and education.
The university now offers classes to military service personnel and their families at some 175+ locations in 20 countries. More than half of UMGC鈥檚 students are active-duty military personnel, their families, members of the National Guard, and veterans.
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