Security and Privacy Research at the University of Virginia

Our research seeks to empower individuals and organizations to control how their data is used. We use techniques from cryptography, programming languages, machine learning, operating systems, and other areas to both understand and improve the privacy and security of computing as practiced today, and as envisioned in the future. A major current focus is on adversarial machine learning.

SRG lunch
SRG Leap Day Lunch (29 February 2024)

We are part of the NSF AI Institute for Agent-based Cyber Threat Intelligence and Operation (ACTION) which seeks to change the way mission-critical systems are protected against sophisticated security threats. Collaboration with UC Santa Barbara (lead), Purdue, UC Berkeley, U Chicago, Georgia Tech, NSU, Rutgers, UIUC, UIC, UW, and WWU.
We are members of the NSF SaTC Frontier Center for Trustworthy Machine Learning (CTML) focused on developing a rigorous understanding of machine learning vulnerabilities and producing tools, metrics, and methods to mitigate them. Collabortion with the University of Wisconsin (lead), UC Berkeley, UC San Diego, and Stanford.
Recent Posts

Visit to University of Tennessee

Had a great time visiting Professor Suya at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville.

I gave a talk (mostly on Hannah’s work, but also including some new work by Nia) in the Tennessee RobUst, Secure, and Trustworthy AI Seminar (TRUST-AI) organized by Suya:


EMNLP: Unsupervised Concept Vector Extraction for Bias Control in LLMs

Our paper on extracting concept vectors for LLMs was presented at the 2025 Conference on Empirical Methods in Natural Language Processing (EMNLP):

Steering “gender” concept in QWEN-1.8B, evaluated on an example from Winogenerated fill-in- the-blank task. Baseline shows the original probabilities with no steering applied.


University of Wisconsin Talk

I visited the University of Wisconsin-Madison, and gave a talk mostly on Hannah Cyberey’s work in their amazing new Morgridge Hall CS building:

University of Wisconsin

Tilting the BobbyTables and Steering the CensorShip

Abstract: AI systems including Large Language Models (LLMs) increasingly influence human writing, thoughts, and actions, yet our ability to measure and control the behavior of these systems is inadequate. In this talk, I will describe some of the risks of uses of language models and ways to measure biases in LLMs. Then, I will advocate for measurement and control strategies that depend on analysis and manipulation of internal representations, and show how a simple inference-time intervention can be used to mitigate gender bias and control model censorship without degrading overall model utility.

Thanks to Patrick McDaniel for hosting a great visit!


AI Exchange Podcast

I was a guest, together with Chirag Agarwal on the AI Exchange podcast hosted by Ryan Wright and Varun Korisapati:

AI Exchange @ UVA Podcast, Episode 4.

Topic: Trustworthy AI depends on ensuring security, privacy, fairness, and explainability.


Olsen Bicentennial Professor

I’m honored to have been elected the “Olsen Bicentennial Professor of Engineering”.

The appointment is in the 12 Septemember 2025 Board of Visitors minutes (page 13072):

RESOLVED, the actions relating to the chairholders are approved as shown below:
David E. Evans, as Olsen Bicentennial Professor of Engineering, for the periodAugust 25, 2025 through August 24, 2030. Evans will continue as Professor of Computer
Science, without term.

The professorship was created by a gift from Greg Olsen in 2019 to celebrate the bicentennial of the University’s founding in 1819:

A $15 million endowment for Olsen Bicentennial Professorships, providing resources for UVA Engineering to recruit and retain leading scholars who will drive collaborative research, create knowledge and technologies to benefit humanity and cultivate an environment of educational innovation.

(From Elizabeth Thiel Mather and T.J. Zepp, Largest-Ever Gift to UVA Engineering will Support Teaching and Research Excellence, UVA Engineering News, November 2019.)