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Education Government Security United States

America's NSA Challenges Students With A Codebreaking Competition, Then Recruits Them (federalnewsnetwork.com) 51

This year America's National Security Agency (NSA) is once again "developing a cyber challenge and daring more than 330 schools and 2,600 students to solve it," writes Federal News Network.

Slashdot reader eatvegetables shares their report: Kathy Hutson, the senior strategist for industry and academic engagement at the NSA, said the Codebreaker Challenge has become one of the best ways to attract the next generation of talent to the federal government... NSA launched the Codebreaker Challenge in 2013 as a way to further connect with students and professors, who are focused on technology and cyber issues. Over the last six years, the annual initiative has become a much-anticipated challenge with professors making it a part of their classes and students testing their mettle against NSA's cyber experts...

The initiative provides students, professors and anyone else who is interested "with a hands-on opportunity to develop their reverse-engineering /low-level code analysis skills while working on a realistic problem set centered around the NSA's mission," said Eric Bryant, a technical director in the crypto analysis organization at the NSA. The 2018 challenge focused on ransomware and blockchain, requiring participants to solve eight separate, but related challenges... Bryant said a group of NSA cyber experts develop the challenge each year on top of their regular duties. He said they try to focus on areas that are either up-and-coming or current cyber threats and attack vectors. For the 2019 Codebreaker Challenge, Bryant said it likely will focus on mobile security threats, probably using an Android operating system...

Bryant said he reaches out to all of the students who solve the challenge and NSA sends them letters of recognition and a memento for participating. "We reach out to these students to figure out what year they are in, how could they come here to do internships or hire them full-time, so we are definitely on that from a hiring and recruitment perspective," Hutson said.
The NSA keeps a leaderboard ranking the participating colleges. (Last year Oregon State had over 100 students participating.)

The 2018 challenge is still online, Bryant says, "and there are people who are working and submitting solutions."
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America's NSA Challenges Students With A Codebreaking Competition, Then Recruits Them

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  • The way I see it, the question isn't, why should you work for the NSA. The question is, why shouldn't you? [youtube.com]

  • Before people waste their time on this, how many figures are you going to pay so people know it will be worth their while? It's not like working for the NSA brings it own rewards.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      Agree completely. If I am going to sell my soul to an institution that routinely abuses its authority and irresponsibly weaponizes vulnerabilities rather than discloses them, and THEN allows those weapons to fall into the hands of (other) criminals....

      I at least want to know how much my soul is worth.

      Google served up a doc from 2014 that said the average salary was a mere $80,000 (I say "mere" given that the desired skills can command more than that in the public sector), with promises that those who also

      • Microsoft? Facebook? Apple? IBM? Oracle? Cisco? Amazon?
        Who aren't you selling your soul to these days?

    • I'm sure they will get an *offer they can't refuse*

      • No, but that is what happens in many of the countries the NSA spies on.

        • Yeah, can't happen here...

          • Exactly, you move the goalposts from being sure it does happen, to saying that you can't disprove the possibility. Well, duh, you can only prove things that do happen, not things that don't happen.

            You're just a hater who lacks awareness of what their own words mean. You don't check if something is true before you say it, you only check if it matches up with your hatred.

    • 5. 5 figures. It is not big enough to measure in digits, you'd need to look at the actual pay rate for the exact job offered.

      You will make less than experts in fake uniforms.

      But more than you'd make for winning the videogame and getting recruited to be The Last Starfighter.

    • From: https://apply.intelligencecare... [intelligencecareers.gov]

      Took a look to see rates being advertised under âoecyberâ. Donâ(TM)t know private market rates for similar qualifications, so canâ(TM)t make judgement on offered pay. Perhaps, someone with relevant knowledge could offer insight.

      Salary Range: $70,519 - $87,868 (Entry/Developmental)

      Salary Range: $81,571 - $108,643 (Full Performance)

      Salary Range: $99,172 - $152,352 (Senior)

      Salary Range: $137,849 - $166,500 (Expert)

    • Sure it does. You can make a killing with insider trading and no one will ever know.
    • Swilver, you are foolish. Working for the NSA brings a ton of rewards.
      Here are the most obvious ones.
      1) Self respect - how many people would love to be able to say they work for the NSA. It's a child hood dream for many Americans to be an actual SPY.
      2) The NSA, unlike the CIA, actually lets people admit they work for them, although they do discourage it. So you can put it on your resume. It helps people get quite a few other jobs, particularly in government. I.E. It is a stepping stone to better emp

  • Perhaps NSA should run an alternative contest with more direct relevance to their personnel needs...

    A Constitution-Burning Competition would surely select for the kind of candidates they require.

One good suit is worth a thousand resumes.

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