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Automate all the things!

We plan to reach out to as many experts in the security field as possible. The more respondents we get, the better! There's just one problem. How do you get emails for a bunch of security professors? Even more so, how do you even find a list with just their names? Thankfully, we can answer the second question. Conference proceedings for security and security-education conferences (Usenix and ASE) both contain experts' names and affiliations.  After spending a few hours manually googling author's names to find their emails, Al suggested we try to automate the process as much as possible. How much benefit could that have, I thought? At the end of the day, we still have to manually click on their homepages or find their email somewhere online. We decided to see how much benefit automation could get us, and the end result is pretty cool. Al wrote a regular expression to pull  that goes through and finds the names of all the authors, as well as their affiliation. Then, given

Hello World

Hi! Welcome to the Security Misconceptions Project blog! We will be updating this blog regularly to celebrate our successes, talk about our processes, air our grievances, and ponder our questions -- we invite you to join us. It'd probably be a good idea to read the about page to get a better idea of what we're trying to do. So, what's the status? Well, our current objectives this week are to get everything set up -- eliminating all the   lorem ipsum   from this blog, putting the finishing touches on our survey, and compiling the list of experts we plan to survey. The goal is to meet with our evaluator from the Education department (possibly to be introduced on this blog soon) who will give everything the once-over before we officially get underway. Stay tuned, the next couple weeks we should be blogging about the process of creating the survey, as well as the process of finding people to actually send it to.