Rajiv Thummala (Cornell University), Eric Race (California Institute of Technology), Gregory Falco (Cornell University)

As space systems become critical infrastructure, they have attracted increasing attention from the cybersecurity community. This paper argues that securing spacecraft requires a mission-centric cybersecurity paradigm that treats mission continuity and availability as first-order design and security primitives, rather than adapting practices from terrestrial systems. We identify seven constraints that shape the space security problem: mission-specific designs that prevent standardization, physics that couples software to irreversible orbital dynamics, permanent loss of hardware access after launch, communication gaps that mandate autonomous decisions, environmental degradation of electronics, tight subsystem dependencies that enable cascading failures, and governance pressures that constrain feasible security architectures. None of these dimensions is unique in isolation, but their simultaneous presence and coupling produces a distinct security problem and design space.

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Les Dissonances: Cross-Tool Harvesting and Polluting in Pool-of-Tools Empowered...

Zichuan Li (University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign), Jian Cui (University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign), Xiaojing Liao (University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign), Luyi Xing (University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign)

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STIP: Three-Party Privacy-Preserving and Lossless Inference for Large Transformers...

Mu Yuan (The Chinese University of Hong Kong), Lan Zhang (University of Science and Technology of China), Yihang Cheng (University of Science and Technology of China), Miao-Hui Song (University of Science and Technology of China), Guoliang Xing (The Chinese University of Hong Kong), Xiang-Yang Li (University of Science and Technology of China)

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DuoLungo: Usability Study of Duo 2FA

Renascence Tarafder Prapty (University of California Irvine), Gene Tsudik (University of California Irvine)

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