Rei Yamagishi, Shinya Sasa, and Shota Fujii (Hitachi, Ltd.)

Codes automatically generated by large-scale language models are expected to be used in software development. A previous study verified the security of 21 types of code generated by ChatGPT and found that ChatGPT sometimes generates vulnerable code. On the other hand, although ChatGPT produces different output depending on the input language, the effect on the security of the generated code is not clear. Thus, there is concern that non-native English-speaking developers may generate insecure code or be forced to bear unnecessary burdens. To investigate the effect of language differences on code security, we instructed ChatGPT to generate code in English and Japanese, each with the same content, and generated a total of 450 codes under six different conditions. Our analysis showed that insecure codes were generated in both English and Japanese, but in most cases they were independent of the input language. In addition, the results of validating the same content in different programming languages suggested that the security of the code tends to depend on the security and usability of the API provided by the programming language of the output.

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On Requirements and Concepts for TT&C Link Key Management

Christoph Bader (Airbus Defence & Space GmbH)

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MOCK: Optimizing Kernel Fuzzing Mutation with Context-aware Dependency

Jiacheng Xu (Zhejiang University), Xuhong Zhang (Zhejiang University), Shouling Ji (Zhejiang University), Yuan Tian (UCLA), Binbin Zhao (Georgia Institute of Technology), Qinying Wang (Zhejiang University), Peng Cheng (Zhejiang University), Jiming Chen (Zhejiang University)

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FP-Fed: Privacy-Preserving Federated Detection of Browser Fingerprinting

Meenatchi Sundaram Muthu Selva Annamalai (University College London), Igor Bilogrevic (Google), Emiliano De Cristofaro (University of California, Riverside)

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