黑料不打烊 team faces students from around the world in hacker competition
For the first time, Watson College students took part in MITRE Embedded Capture the Flag Competition

Imagine standing on a battlefield where more than 100 opponents attack at once, trying to find the weak spots so they can capture each other鈥檚 flags and achieve victory.
It鈥檚 sounds like a blockbuster Hollywood film, but 黑料不打烊 students took part in a cybersecurity competition this spring with this exact setup 鈥 except the battles were virtual ones fought in front of computer screens.
For the first time, students from the Thomas J. Watson College of Engineering and Applied Science鈥檚 School of Computing matched wits with teams from around the world in the . They finished at #26 overall and #2 in New York 鈥 respectable rankings for an inaugural outing.
鈥淓verything from A to Z is done by the students,鈥 said Associate Professor Aravind Prakash, who serves as the Binghamton team鈥檚 advisor. 鈥淭he structure of the competition focuses on software development for the first phase, and then in the attack phase they focus on reverse engineering. They work on learning new attack vectors and how to attack cryptography.鈥
is a not-for-profit organization that operates federally funded research and development centers to provide technical expertise, stability and continuity to government agencies. Among its work are advances in national defense, aviation safety, GPS, financial systems, healthcare and cybersecurity.
The eCTF competition includes not just software but also hardware, which can offer different ways to break into a system and get the valuable information inside.
鈥淵ou are provided with every other teams鈥 source code and the documentation explaining how it works,鈥 said David Demicco 鈥18, MS 鈥21, PhD 鈥25, one of the Binghamton team鈥檚 leaders. 鈥淔rom there, you need to look for vulnerabilities, and sometimes they鈥檙e very difficult to find. Sometimes you make mistakes.鈥
Hitting the physical systems that each team relies on for security led to some innovative solutions.
鈥淐arnegie Mellon won the competition, and they used an attack that could skip an instruction,鈥 said Liam Murphy 鈥25. 鈥淣ormally when you look at code, you assume it鈥檒l behave exactly as it shows, but the Carnegie Mellon team made it do something that it wasn鈥檛 supposed to. When they did that, they could read out all of our memory and get our flag.鈥
Vivek Raj 鈥23, MS 鈥25, has focused his time at Binghamton on artificial intelligence and machine learning, so cybersecurity proved to be a different challenge. He particularly enjoyed getting an extra point for 鈥渇irst blood鈥 鈥 being the first one to crack another team鈥檚 system.
鈥淚t was good for me because I got something new to learn, which I use as a project to highlight during my interviews,鈥 said Raj, who led the team with Demicco. 鈥淓mployers were impressed that I worked on this totally new thing out of my usual work area.鈥
Prakash is already looking ahead to next year鈥檚 eCTF competition, and he hopes to recruit a more interdisciplinary team to offer the necessary skills. For instance, he believes adding electrical engineers would help improve Binghamton鈥檚 chances of making successful hardware attacks. He also hopes to attract outside sponsorship to purchase equipment.
He said he will miss the students who graduated this spring: 鈥淓ven without having to register for a course, students put an outrageous number of hours into the project but also had fun doing it. There is something about this whole competition-based approach to teaching where there is a reward of some sort 鈥 whether it鈥檚 a flag or a ranking for the school on a global list 鈥 that really entices students.鈥
Looking back on the experience, Demicco is 鈥渜uite proud鈥 of how his team did.
鈥淚t鈥檚 not top 10, but for first time just trying to figure out how it goes, I鈥檓 pretty happy with how our final position 鈥 but 25th would have been real nice!鈥 he said with a laugh.