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February 21, 2025 Zakir Durumeric, Stanford University Online hate and harassment shape the day-to-day experiences of many Internet users. Attacks range from anonymous peers breaking into a target's account to leak personal photos and creating non-consensual deepfake sexual imagery to sexual harassment campaigns coordinated across tens of thousands of attackers. In a survey by Pew in 2021, 40% of people worldwide report personally experiencing varying degrees of harassment and bullying online. We argue that there exist parallels between the abusive attacks that users face online and traditional cybersecurity attacks, as well as similarities in how we can build more effective defenses against them. In this talk, Iâ ll describe these similarities and present several of our recent investigations into understanding attacks online and building tools to protect against them. In the first case study, I'll overview our recent work on the MrDeepFakes platform, the largest open platform for soliciting and viewing sexual deepfake material. In the second, I'll present our work understanding harassment towards journalists online and the nuances of building solutions that meet their practical needs. About the speaker: Zakir Durumeric is an Assistant Professor of Computer Science at Stanford University and Founder/Chief Scientist of Censys. His research brings a large-scale, empirical approach to the study of Internet security, trust, and safety. In particular, his work builds systems to measure complex networked ecosystems and uses the resulting perspective to understand online behavior, uncover attacks and weaknesses, guide policy, and architect more resilient defenses. He has been named a Sloan Research Fellow, National Academy of Sciences Kavli Fellow, and to MIT Technology Review's 35 Innovators under 35. His work has received a USENIX Security "Test of Time" award, two IRTF Applied Networking Research Prizes, and Best Paper distinctions from USENIX Security, CCS, CSCW, and IMC. He holds a Ph.D. in Computer Science and Engineering from the University of Michigan. More about the course can be found here: https://hci.stanford.edu/seminar/ View the entire CS547 Stanford Human-Computer Interaction Seminar playlist: • Stanford CS547 - Human-Computer Interactio... ► Check out the entire catalog of courses and programs available through Stanford Online: https://online.stanford.edu/explore