Summary
Hey, I’m Connor Wadlin! I’m a Senior here at George Mason University, where I am majoring in Cybersecurity Engineering.
I am on track to earn my Bachelor’s Degree and then a Master’s in Cybersecurity. I have been accepted into George Mason University’s Accelerated Masters program for Cybersecurity Engineering and I plan on pursuing a specialization in Artificial Intelligence. I currently work in a lab utilizing drone technology and AI to automatically detect flight errors and alert users. I plan on pursuing a variety of certifications after my Masters, as I plan on being a well-rounded Cybersecurity specialist!
While I do not have much work experience currently, I would love to change that. I am an amazing team leader as well as a public speaker due to my years of soft-skill training. I excel whenever I am working within a group and we can effectively delegate tasks based on good communication and trust!
OnAir Post: Connor Wadlin
News
When George Mason University cyber security engineering major Connor Wadlin learned about ransomware attacks on organizations, such as the one on the Health Service Executive in Ireland, in his CYSE 445 System Security and Resilience class, it confirmed his commitment to dedicating his educational and professional career to protecting and preserving human lives.
“There’s nothing more important than protecting and defending others. As an engineer, I’m driven to get important work done by thinking about complex problems and finding suitable solutions,” said Wadlin, who is from Leesburg, Virginia.
Since winter 2024, the Honors College student has been interning at the Commonwealth Cyber Initiative(CCI) Northern Virginia Node, George Mason’s branch of the statewide network dedicated of excellence in cybersecurity research. CCI’s mission includes workforce development through training the next generation of cybersecurity experts.

“It’s a super exciting job because I get to work with AprilTags, which are on objects that the drone’s camera then sees and scans. Instead of sharing data, the tags utilize location information for navigation, tracking objects, or pathing purposes,” he said.
Wadlin is also simulating drone flight with the Microsoft tool Air Sim, a project he presented at the CCI Symposium in April. “I created a model with a 98% accuracy, really high F1 score—higher than what we could find on the market—detecting collisions so the drones would be able to respond to anomalous factors such as objects that get too close, environmental variables, cyber-attacks, and more,” he explained.
Wadlin learned about many of the tools he’s currently using for CCI in his classes with College of Engineering and Computing professors, such as his mentor Mohamed Gebril, an associate professor in the Department of Cyber Security Engineering.
“George Mason supports people where they are to get them where they want to be,” Wadlin said.
The skills Wadlin has acquired during his time at George Mason and in his work with CCI have enable him to help other students in their studies.
“Connor is a very skilled student and has been able to develop different programs, as well as 12 labs for sophomore- and freshman-level students at George Mason. He even assists the students during our workshops,” said Gebril.
Wadlin is participating in George Mason’s Bachelor’s to Accelerated Master’s Program and will to pursuing a master’s degree also in cyber security. Gebril said he’s looking forward to having Wadlin in his classes again as a graduate student.
“It will be a smooth transition from the undergraduate to the graduate level because the curriculum aligns well with the CCI mission, which is to equip our students with the tools to conduct research activity and develop cutting–edge technology,” said Gebril.
Wadlin’s team is also working to develop a first–of–its–kind cyber drone race that incorporates cybersecurity challenges and artificial intelligence for undergraduate students.
Wadlin was diagnosed with autism at 19 and sees this diagnosis as working to his advantage by allowing him to see things from different perspectives and approach problems with his own unique ideas.
“As an engineer, you have to ask yourself ‘how is this making the world a better place?’ That’s always got to be the end goal,” said Wadlin.
About
Experience
Program Development Associate
Commonwealth Cyber Initiative (CCI) · Part-time
Dec 2024 – Present · 11 mos
Fairfax County, Virginia, United States · Hybrid
Helped develop a virtual flight environment for drone testing, real-time logging, and data collection within Splunk, writing a variety of technical reports for students to follow, adapting drone technology to handle LLM anomaly detection, and so much more!
Education
George Mason University – College of Engineering and Computing
Master’s degree, Cybersecurity Engineering, Concentration in Artificial Intelligence
Nov 2024 – May 2028
Was accepted into George Mason University’s Accelerated Master’s Program on 11/26/2024 by the College of Engineering and Computing. Will begin taking Accelerated Master’s classes in Senior year, pacing me to be very competitive within the industry!
George Mason University – College of Engineering and Computing
Bachelor’s degree, Cybersecurity Engineering
2022 – 2026
Grade: 3.71 GPA
Secretary and then Vice President of YDSA @ Mason Chapter
Skills: Analytical Skills · Teamwork · Problem Solving · Computing · Leadership · Critical Thinking · Communication · Soft Skills · Presentations
Skills
Skills: Analytical Skills · Teamwork · Problem Solving · Computing · Leadership · Critical Thinking · Communication · Soft Skills · Presentations
Web Links
Articles
Thanking GMU Honors College
I would like to thank the George Mason University Honors College Instagram for highlighting the amazing work my team and I have been doing through the Commonwealth Cyber Initiative (CCI)!
Our work with UAS for Cybersecurity has yielded tremendous results so far. From autonomous flight through encrypted courses, object detection and response, and even anti-jamming capabilities, we have made great strides in the field!
I greatly look forward to presenting our work at the next CCI conference in the summer, and to teams of students getting involved in solving our challenges. Thank you, Dr. Mohamed Gebril of George Mason University – College of Engineering and Computing, Joshua French, and Logan Breckenridge, for your amazing work on this project!
Here’s a link to the Instagram story for all interested:
Here’s a link to the original story published by Shayla Brown for George Mason University:
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