FIREStarter: LSU Partners with Louisiana State Police, Industry to Train Hundreds of New Cybersecurity Professionals, Deploy Cyber Range with State Support
September 14, 2021
New initiative stacks cybersecurity expertise and assets to help secure Louisiana and bridge a critical 500,000 U.S. workforce gap.

Through FIREStarter and the new LSU cyber range, students and partners, including Louisiana State Police, will be able to simulate real-time cyberattacks on large-scale enterprise and control systems, including schools, hospitals, and chemical and industrial plants. The effort aligns Louisiana experts and assets to bridge a critical workforce gap for cybersecurity professionals (estimated at 500,000 unfilled jobs in the U.S., with starting salaries around $90K) and have a profound impact on the economy and security of Louisiana and the nation.
鈥 Elsa Hahne/LSU
Baton Rouge鈥擳hrough its new Cybersecurity Talent Initiative Fund, the Louisiana Board of Regents is investing $185,911 in LSU in a broad workforce development effort to rapidly train more cybersecurity professionals. The initiative, called FIREStarter, will engage both traditional and non-traditional students through the establishment of a cyber range鈥攁 new Forensic and Incident Response Environment, or 鈥淔IRE鈥 in FIREStarter鈥攊n the LSU Digital Media Center on the main campus. The range technology, provided by Cyber Range Solutions, Inc., will be supported by data and instruction through a partnership with Louisiana State Police, whose Cyber Crime Unit investigates cyberattacks against state-operated networks, including critical infrastructure, local agencies, and K-12 schools.
Program participants will leverage LONI, the Louisiana Optical Network Infrastructure鈥攁 high-speed optical network managed by LSU that connects 20 universities and 63 technical and community colleges鈥攖o port real-time threat data into the LSU cyber range. There, about 100 students per semester will gain hands-on experience analyzing and defending against cyberattacks and emergent malware, including ransomware.
鈥淓very organization in the U.S. needs the ability to prevent, stop, and respond to cybersecurity attacks, and determine what was compromised or lost. Given the current workforce gap in Louisiana and across the nation, it鈥檚 imperative that we get students interested early and then give them the skills to make a difference in improving the cybersecurity posture of both the state and the country,鈥 said Golden G. Richard, III, LSU professor of computer science, associate director for cybersecurity at the LSU Center for Computation & Technology, and FIREStarter faculty lead.
IREStarter will become part of a growing effort, led by Richard, to train more highly skilled cybersecurity professionals 星空无限传媒. In 2019, he and an interdisciplinary team of investigators received $3.4 million from the National Science Foundation to establish the LSU Scholarships for Service (SFS) program, which offers students generous scholarships and guaranteed jobs upon graduation. Just this year, LSU was also chosen by the National Security Agency (NSA) as the first non-member university to pilot the new designation process for their , the top designation for cybersecurity in higher education in the United States, with 23 universities currently participating.
鈥淕iven the current workforce gap in Louisiana and across the nation, it鈥檚 imperative that we get students interested early and then give them the skills to make a difference.鈥
Golden G. Richard, III, LSU Professor
Louisiana State Police partnered with FIREStarter as part of the mission of the new Louisiana Cyber Investigators Alliance, which Louisiana State Police was charged by the state legislature to build last year. The partnership will help train law enforcement officers on digital forensics techniques and standard procedures for conducting investigations involving computer and network compromises.
Cyber Range Solutions, Inc., the technology provider for the LSU cyber range, is a national leader in cybersecurity experiential training platforms based in San Antonio, Texas.
We鈥檙e honored to partner with LSU on this exciting opportunity,鈥 said CRS CEO Bash Kazi. 鈥淭he need for workforce development in cybersecurity in the U.S. is tremendous and our unique tool will undoubtedly enhance those efforts in Louisiana. LSU joins an impressive group鈥攁mong the 16 academic institutions we鈥檝e partnered with so far, 7 are CAE-designated.鈥
One of LSU鈥檚 key industry partners on FIREStarter is Radiance Technologies, a defense contractor based in Huntsville, Alabama that provides cybersecurity solutions for the intelligence community, armed services, and the U.S. Department of Homeland Security. Radiance will provide immersive internships for LSU FIREStarter students.
鈥淲e invest in a superior technical workforce to develop leaders and encourage innovation to tackle the nation鈥檚 toughest technical challenges,鈥 said Heath Berry, vice president of electronic systems and cyber technologies at Radiance Technologies. 鈥淲e see this partnership with 星空无限传媒 the FIREStarter program as an excellent opportunity to provide students with direct cyber workforce experience in support of our customers.鈥
鈥淲e see this partnership with 星空无限传媒 the FIREStarter program as an excellent opportunity to provide students with direct cyber workforce experience in support of our customers.鈥
Heath Berry, vice president of electronic systems and cyber technologies at Radiance Technologies
Radiance has previously worked with LSU on cyber research initiatives.
鈥淲e look forward to continuing this relationship long-term and supporting the research ecosystem in Baton Rouge and our continued investment in Louisiana,鈥 Berry said.
According to Anas 鈥淣ash鈥 Mahmoud, associate professor in the LSU Division of Computer Science & Engineering and director of the LSU Software Engineering and Evolution Lab, students are already lining up to be part of the new program and use the cyber range.
鈥淔IREStarter will provide an unprecedented opportunity for our students, across all concentrations of computer science, to get hands-on experience in cyber security and threat analysis,鈥 Mahmoud said. 鈥淭hey will fill an important workforce gap and have a clear advantage in the job market.鈥
鈥淲e are also planning to be inclusive and make an effort to publicize this opportunity to all students, including women and underrepresented minorities,鈥 said Juana Moreno, professor in the LSU Department of Physics & Astronomy with a joint appointment in the LSU Center for Computation & Technology. 鈥淎s an example, women hold only 11% of cyber security jobs worldwide, and FIREStarter could be a way to change that.鈥
Louisiana State Police will provide LSU with an experienced analyst from its Cyber Crime Unit to teach two new cybersecurity classes 星空无限传媒. These classes will help bridge the knowledge gap for beginning computer science students and train them on incident response. Additionally, this learning experience will prepare the students to enroll in more advanced courses in memory forensics, malware analysis, reverse engineering, and exploit development 星空无限传媒.
鈥淲omen hold only 11% of cyber security jobs worldwide, and FIREStarter could be a way to change that.鈥
Juana Moreno, LSU Professor
LONI, Louisiana鈥檚 LSU-managed high-speed optical network, can be used to transmit information securely between educational institutions in the state and is powered by the Queen Bee supercomputers on LSU鈥檚 main campus. It will broaden access to the LSU cyber range for any participating partner connected to its network via roughly 1,700 miles of fiber optic cable.
Lonnie Leger, executive director of LONI, likens the LSU cyber range to a virtual firing range.
鈥淵ou can handle a weapon in offensive and defensive positions as long as you learn how to use that tool ethically,鈥 Leger said. 鈥淭he cyber range will allow our students and all of our partners to do so in a safe and controlled environment.鈥
鈥淎t LSU, our focus is on producing top-tier cybersecurity practitioners and researchers鈥 essentially, cybersecurity superheroes,鈥 Richard said. 鈥淭he cyber range will make this effort easier, across the cybersecurity curriculum, by allowing us to offer additional hands-on, practical education in both offensive and defensive cybersecurity. Beyond formal coursework, the range gives us a platform to host capture-the-flag and other events to attract student attention early. Finally, FIREStarter strengthens our relationships with state and industrial partners and opens up new collaborative opportunities for students. It鈥檚 going to make a huge difference.鈥
The Hunt for New Hackers (LSU Office of Research & Economic Development)
LSU Awarded $3.4 Million NSF Cybersecurity Training Grant (LSU College of Engineering)