Geovane Fedrecheski
Geovane Fedrecheski

Senior Systems Engineer
10+ years building things that connect, securely 🛜 🔐

About Me

I currently lead the 1,000-robot DotBots testbed at Inria Paris and contribute to IETF security standards for the IoT.

Before Inria, I developed IoT systems and web platforms in São Paulo, improved the Android networking stack at LG Electronics, and taught IoT and web security to 150k+ online students.

Open to consulting and collaborations. See what’s new or get in touch.

Download CV
Interests
  • Swarm Robotics
  • Internet of Things
  • IoT Security
Education
  • PhD Electrical Engineering

    University of São Paulo

  • BSc Computer Science

    West-Central University of Paraná

My Work
After a PhD on IoT security at USP, I joined Inria to implement EDHOC (via Lakers, Rust library downloaded 80k+ times) and co-author ELA, an IETF draft for zero-touch IoT authorization. I designed and implemented Mari, an award-winning wireless protocol that scales BLE to hundreds of robots (EWSN 2025 Best Demo). I currently lead the 1,000-robot DotBots testbed, the largest interactive swarm robotics platform to date.
👤 Bio

🇺🇸 English

Geovane Fedrecheski is a research engineer at the AIO team of the French National Institute for Research in Digital Science and Technology (Inria) in Paris. He holds a Bachelor’s degree in Computer Science (UNICENTRO) and a PhD in Electrical Engineering (USP), and was a visitor scholar at UC Berkeley. He has developed mobile, web, and IoT systems, worked at LG Electronics, and taught MOOCs. He contributes to global IoT security standards at IETF and developed the Micro-robot Access Radio Infrastructure (Mari). At Inria, he currently leads the development of the OpenSwarm Testbed, an open and scalable platform for swarm robotics research and education.

🇧🇷 Português

Geovane Fedrecheski é engenheiro de pesquisa na equipe AIO do Instituto Nacional de Pesquisa em Ciências Digitais e Tecnologia (Inria) em Paris. Bacharel em Ciência da Computação (UNICENTRO) e doutor em Engenharia Elétrica (USP), teve passagem pela UC Berkeley. Desenvolveu sistemas móveis, Web e IoT, trabalhou na LG Electronics e foi professor na Alura. Contribui para padrões globais de segurança em IoT no IETF e desenvolveu a Micro-robot Access Radio Infrastructure (Mari). Atualmente no Inria, ele lidera o desenvolvimento da OpenSwarm Testbed, uma plataforma aberta e escalável para pesquisa e ensino em swarm robotics.