
“There are currently 290,000 vacant cybersecurity jobs in the United States with an average starting salary of about $80,000,” said Gary Warner, director of the UAB Center for Information Assurance and Joint Forensics Research. “That deficit is expected to increase to 1.5 million globally by the year 2019. We have a tremendous opportunity to fill some of these jobs if we can find kids who are passionate about cybersecurity, help them come to UAB to get a degree and guide them on the path to a great career.”
Students competed for $20,000 in scholarship funds to study computer science or digital forensics as UAB. The event, hosted by the UAB College of Arts and Sciences Department of Justice Sciences and Palo Alto Networks, tested their knowledge of cybersecurity in a number of areas, including social media, network analysis, file analysis, data encoding and encryption, and web security.

The winners of this year’s Blazer42 Capture the Flag Scholarship Competition are:
First Place: Huntsville High School seniors Nick Nurre, Bryce Willhelm, Connor Smith and Dylan Maurel of the team RSAHHS. Each team member was awarded $2,500 in scholarship funds to be used toward the study of cybersecurity at UAB.
Second Place: Tuscaloosa Academy juniors Jesse Wells, Jonas Schanz, Sam Daly and Sam Zito of the team Warriors of the Net. Each team member was awarded $1,500 in scholarship funds to study at UAB.
Third Place: Michael Charette, Robert Thompson, Timothy Jesionowski and Nicholas Scala of team OR 1=1. The students attend James Clemens High School in Madison, Alabama. Each team member was awarded $1,000 in scholarship funds to study at UAB.
Other high schools represented in this year’s competition include the Jefferson County International Baccalaureate School and students from the John Pope Eden Career Tech Center in Ashville, Alabama.

Digital forensics involves the recovery and investigation of material found on digital devices. The focus of the digital forensics program is an understanding of the procedures and processes necessary to discover, recover, analyze and present in court information that has been stored on digital devices, including mainframe and personal computers, cellphones, tablets, and gaming and other devices used during illegal activities. The program also puts an emphasis on investigating cybercrime for the purpose of prevention.
Next year’s Blazer42 Capture the Flag Scholarship Competition will be held Saturday, Feb. 24, 2018.