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Scott Ruoti

Scott Ruoti

Scott Ruoti

Associate Professor


Contact Information

Scott Ruoti

  • Office Address: Min H. Kao Building, Room 203
  • Phone: 865-974-5449
  • Fax: 865-974-5483
  • E-mail: ruoti@utk.edu
Personal Website

Education

  • PhD in Computer Science, Brigham Young University, 2016
  • MS in Computer Science, Brigham Young University, 2015
  • BS in Computer Science, Brigham Young University, 2011
  • BA in Chinese, Brigham Young University, 2011

Biography

Scott Ruoti

Scott Ruoti is an assistant professor of electrical engineering and computer science at UT. He received his PhD degree in computer science from Brigham Young University in 2016.

Ruoti's primary research focus is in computer security and privacy. He is particularly interested in researching how to create software systems that ensure correct and secure operation when deployed to actual users. As such, he conducts holistic, interdisciplinary research using methods from the measurement, security and privacy, and human-computer interaction (HCI) communities. His research process starts by (1) measuring the real-world impact of a given problem, then (2) designing systems that address those issues, and finally (3) conducting usability studies to evaluate whether the developed systems achieves its goals under realistic usage conditions when operated by actual users.

Ruoti's currently active research areas include authentication (improving password managers and multi-factor authentication), usable encryption (helping build usable, secure email and messaging systems), helping software developers create secure software, and building distributed systems where trust is decentralized (blockchain technology).

Prior to coming to the university, Ruoti was a researcher at MIT Lincoln Laboratory. While there, he led a range of efforts, including acting as the chief architect for the Department of Homeland Security’s Cyber.gov program that is tasked with creating a next-generation cybersecurity architecture for all non-DoD federal departments and agencies. He also led a research team exploring non-cryptocurrency usages for Blockchain technology. Prior to his time at MIT Lincoln Laboratory, Ruoti also worked at Microsoft, Microsoft Research, Google, Blue Coat Systems (Symantec), and Sandia National Laboratories.

As part of his dissertation, Ruoti designed email systems that are both secure and easy-to-use, especially for novice users. The final version of our secure email system outperforms other similar systems in terms of usability, ranking in the top 15% among the hundreds of software systems subjected to a standard usability test. My design reduced user errors from 25% to 2%, and increased user understanding and trust in secure email.”


Research

Scott Ruoti

  • Authentication
  • Secure Software Development
  • Usable Encryption
  • Blockchain Technology
  • Measurement
Google Scholar