Introduction

I am a senior principal researcher in the Office of the CTO, Azure for Operators at Microsoft, specializing in the creation of trusted and secure systems. My interests span all aspects of systems and networking research.

My research is driven by its practical impact. Throughout my career, I have, along with my colleagues, managed to:

  • Influence the DRAM industry to address the threat of Rowhammer attacks.
  • Develop and launch a cloud service used by 20+ million users.
  • Create the reference implementation of the firmware TPM.
  • Build one of the first face recognition-based payment systems, six years before Amazon Go was launched.

Prior to joining Microsoft, I served as a faculty member in the Computer Science Department at the University of Toronto. I earned my Ph.D. from the Computer Science & Engineering department at the University of Washington, and I am an ACM Fellow.

Microsoft Research has featured me in a podcast on Rowhammer and published a blog post detailing my background and research. I also maintain a page with brief articles on various topics related to Rowhammer.


News

Jan '24
Very humbled to be named an ACM fellow. As always, this award is the result of the work of many of my brilliant colleagues and students.
Jan '24
Managing servers in the hybrid cloud is incredibly challenging. Our HotMobile 2024 paper presents two-person control -- one way to address this challenge.
Oct '23
In the cloud, per-VM hardware resources are strongly isolated from one another except for DRAM! Our SOSP 2023 paper shows how to accomplish per-VM DRAM isolation using DRAM subarrays, a DRAM-internal architectural block.
Sep '23
DRAMSec 2023 recordings are now available online for everyone to watch!

Recent Publications

Towards Multi-Stakeholder Clouds
Bohdan Borysei, Stefan Saroiu, Eyal de Lara
HotMobile 2024
Siloz: Leveraging DRAM Isolation Domains to Prevent Inter-VM Rowhammer
Kevin Loughlin, Jonah Rosenblum, Stefan Saroiu, Alec Wolman, Dimitrios Skarlatos, Baris Kasikci
SOSP 2023

Recent Service