As of 2015, Rubin is Director of the Health and Medical Security Lab at Johns Hopkins. Away from his professional pursuits, Avi is also a self-professed 'poker fanatic' and has competed against professional players on the popular Poker Night in America television show. (FREE) Introduction to the Theory and Practice of Poker. Author: Avi Rubin. The Education of a Poker Player. Author: Jim McManus. The Course: Serious Hold 'Em Strategy For Smart Players. 'All in' is not just a phrase Avi Rubin throws around during poker games. It's a way of life. Whether it's photography, boating, or his specialty field of applied cryptography, the Johns Hopkins computer science professor 'never does anything halfway,' says his wife, Ann.
I am Professor of Computer Science at Johns Hopkins University and Technical Director of the JHU Information Security Institute. My primary research area is Computer Security, and my latest research focuses on security for healthcare IT systems. German poker days rozvadov 2019. I am Director of the Health and Medical Security (HMS) Lab at Johns Hopkins. I also founded Harbor Labs, a company that focuses on security for medical devices, and Harbor Experts, which provides consulting and technical expertise and testimony in high tech litigation. Our product, FirmwareIQ, provides automated secuirty analysis for IoT and other devices.
I am a frequent speaker on Information Security. Some highlights include TED talks (featured on the TED Radio Hour) in October, 2011 and September, 2015 about hacking devices, a TED Youth talk, testimony in Congressional hearings, and a high level security briefing at the Pentagon to the Assistant Secretary of the Army and a group of generals.
Prior to joining the faculty at Johns Hopkins, I worked in the Secure Systems Research Department at AT&T Labs - Research. My work there was in the area of cryptography, network security, Web security and secure Internet services. I received my B.S. (‘89), M.S.E. (‘91), and Ph.D. (‘94) in Computer Science from the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor.
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I am an avid poker player, and I participated in a TV show called Poker Night in America where I had the opportunity to play in a high stakes (for me) cash game against some of the top pros. I've also played in the World Series of Poker Main Event, but you know I did not win it, since I am still working my day job. My Intersession 2020 course at Johns Hopkins, Introduction to the Theory and Practice of Poker had 232 registered students and 14 auditing students. Videos of the lectures and slides are available online.
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I am a frequent speaker on Information Security. Some highlights include TED talks (featured on the TED Radio Hour) in October, 2011 and September, 2015 about hacking devices, a TED Youth talk, testimony in Congressional hearings, and a high level security briefing at the Pentagon to the Assistant Secretary of the Army and a group of generals.
Prior to joining the faculty at Johns Hopkins, I worked in the Secure Systems Research Department at AT&T Labs - Research. My work there was in the area of cryptography, network security, Web security and secure Internet services. I received my B.S. (‘89), M.S.E. (‘91), and Ph.D. (‘94) in Computer Science from the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor.
Avi Rubin Poker App
I am an avid poker player, and I participated in a TV show called Poker Night in America where I had the opportunity to play in a high stakes (for me) cash game against some of the top pros. I've also played in the World Series of Poker Main Event, but you know I did not win it, since I am still working my day job. My Intersession 2020 course at Johns Hopkins, Introduction to the Theory and Practice of Poker had 232 registered students and 14 auditing students. Videos of the lectures and slides are available online.
Avi Rubin Poker Game
And finally, in April, 2018, I became a licensed Merchant Marine Master 100 Ton Boat Captain with Sailing Endorsement. Being on the water is my passion and my backup career if Computer Science somehow becomes irrelevant in the world.
'All in' is not just a phrase Avi Rubin throws around during poker games. It's a way of life.
Whether it's photography, boating, or his specialty field of applied cryptography, the Johns Hopkins computer science professor 'never does anything halfway,' says his wife, Ann.
Rubin's poker prowess outside the classroom has been well documented over the past 15 years since his younger brother, Yaacov, a senior finance official at Hopkins, introduced him to it.
But during January's Intersession, the 52-year-old professor had the opportunity to bring his passion into the classroom by teaching 'Introduction to the Theory and Practice of Poker.' His commitment to the course was evident: he had trophies made for various competitions he organized, he bought a domain name for the class—hopkinspokercourse.com, which houses all of his filmed lectures and course materials—he set up a students-only PokerStars.com page, and he hosted a tournament at his house.
'It was like a dream come true for him,' his wife says.
Avi Rubin Poker Player
Rubin wasn't the only one excited about the course, which did not involve gambling real money. Nearly 250 students registered for the class, including his daughter Elana, a junior Writing Seminars major. That made it the most popular Intersession course by far, representing 10% of the nearly 2,500 students who signed up for January classes.
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'It's been amazing,' Rubin says.