Source: https://quandarypeak.com/software-experts/sam-malek/
Timestamp: 2019-04-21 16:20:42+00:00

Document:
Sam Malek is an Associate Professor in the School of Information and Computer Sciences at the University of California at Irvine and a member of the Informatics Department. He is the director of Software Engineering and Analysis Laboratory and a member of DARPA’s Computer Science Study Panel.
He was previously an Associate Professor in the Computer Science Department at George Mason University (GMU), where he was the director of GMU’s Software Design and Analysis Laboratory.
Prior to his academic appointments, Sam Malek worked as a software engineer in a variety of roles and on the development of numerous industrial software systems. Malek has experience with testifying in both jury trial and deposition as an expert witness in the fields of computer science and software engineering. He has served as a computer science expert witness and drafted numerous reports in high-stakes intellectual property infringement, breach-of-contract, and software dispute matters.
As a renowned computer science expert, he has published on a variety of topics, served on the panel of many scientific boards and journals, and frequently spoken at scientific gatherings.
Has been deposed and testified as a computer science expert witness at trial numerous times.
Managed research projects with more than four million dollars in funding, sponsored by both government and private sector.
Worked as a software engineer in a variety of roles in several industrial organizations prior to his academic appointment as a professor.
Conducts research in the field of software engineering, spanning the areas of software design and architecture, smartphone and mobile computing, Internet and web technologies, middleware, service oriented computing, autonomic computing, software dependability and security, and distributed and embedded systems.
Authored more than 70 manuscripts published in peer-reviewed scientific conferences and journals.
Frequently serves as organizer, program committee member, and speaker at premier scientific gatherings and conferences (currently an associate editor of the IEEE Transactions on Software Engineering).
Received his Ph.D. and MS degrees in Computer Science from the University of Southern California and his B.S. degree in Information and Computer Science from the University of California Irvine.
Has received numerous awards for his scientific contributions, including the National Science Foundation CAREER award and GMU Computer Science Department Outstanding Faculty Research award.
Member of the Association for Computing Machinery (ACM), ACM Special Interest Group on Software Engineering (SIGSOFT), and the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE).
Ford Motor Company v. Versata Software, Inc., F/K/A Trilogy Software, Inc.
Counsel: Ahmad, Zavitsanos, Anaipakos, Alavi, and Mensing P.C.
Chrome Systems Inc. v. Internet Brands Inc., Autodata Solutions Inc., et al.
TiVo Inc. v. Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd., et al.
Ericsson Inc., et al. v TCL Communication Technology Holdings, LTD, et al.
STAR CO Ranger Digital, LLC v. Microsoft Corporation, et al.
Rockstar Consortium US LP and Netstar Technologies LLC v Google Inc.
Counsel: Fish and Richardson P.C.
Alarm.com Inc. v. iControl Networks Inc.
Steve Morsa v. Facebook Inc.
Clori Isaac v. Geo. Mijilem & Co., Inc.
Miants, LLC, et al. v. Kevin Lasser, et al.
Counsel: Mantese, Honigman, Rossman & Williamson, P.C.
Motorola Mobility Inc. v. Apple Inc.
iControl Networks Inc. v. Alarm.com Inc., et al.
United States ex rel. Hooper v. Lockheed Martin Corp.
In a project funded by Science Applications International Corporation (SAIC), Sam led a team of three programmers in the development of a situational awareness application for use on mobile Android devices.

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