
When: Saturday, December 13th, 2014
Where:
Microsoft City Center
600 108th Ave NE
Bellevue, Wa
Doors open at: 8:00 am - 5:30 pm
CFP: (Closed)
TICKETS:
Invite your friends by posting this on Twitter: #BSidesSeattle
Follow @BsidesSeattle for updates!
Questions?
hit up:
@BsidesSeattle
or
[email protected]
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Speaker Room |
Tactical Room |
Class Room |
8:15:00 |
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Reg opens/Breakfast
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9:30:00 |
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Attack ships on fire, C-beams glittering in the dark, and other things you people wouldn't believe
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Introduction to
Arduino Magic
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LockPick Brief #1 |
10:30:00 |
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YOU CAN FIND THE MOST ADVANCED MALWARE, EVEN THE SNEAKY NSA STUFF WITH THIS METHOD
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LockPick Brief #2 |
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11:30:00 |
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Identifying the Insider Threat
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So you think you can pick? Part 1 |
12:00:00 |
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So you think you can pick? Part 2 |
12:30:00 |
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Lunch
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13:30:00 |
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Defensive talks NOT “sexy”? What’s sexier than catching an attack like Target, APT, SET or your Pen Tester?
Let me show you some sexy logging
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Attacking USB -
Lets get the Hands Dirty
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WTFPGA -
Demystify FPGAs
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14:30:00 |
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Shoulda, Woulda, Coulda |
15:00:00 |
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How to Grow A Hacker |
15:30:00 |
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ShellForth - Shell-code cross-compiler for Forth
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16:30:00 |
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Council of Internet Wizards - Hack the Planet, Save the World, Surf the Tubes.
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17:30:00 |
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Closing, give away all the things |
Sponsors
Want to show your support for an awesome event? Details found here: Seattle Bsides - Sponsor
Core Supporters |
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Community Supporters |


Black Lodge Research
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Tags for flickr, twitter, blog, etc.
Please use the tag #BsidesSeattle for content related to this event
Planners
- Josh M (@nerd_monkey)
- Mike A (@ma)
Offensive Defense |
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Cyber-criminals have had back-end infrastructures equivalent to Virus Total to test if malware and exploits are effective against AV scanners for many years, thus showing that attackers are proactively avoiding detection when building malware. In this day of age malicious binaries are generated on demand by server-side kits when a victim visits a malicious web page, making reliance solely on hash based solutions inadequate. In the last 15 years detection techniques have evolved in an attempt to keep up with attack trends. In the last few years security companies have looked for supplemental solutions such as the use of machine learning to detect and mitigate attacks against cyber criminals. Let's not pretend attackers can't bypass each and every detection technique currently deployed. Join me as I present and review current detection methods found in most host and network security solutions found today. We will re-review the defense in depth strategy while keeping in mind that a solid security strategy consists of forcing an attacker to spend as much time and effort while needing to know a variety of skills and technologies in order to successfully pull off the attack. In the end I hope to convince you that thinking defensively requires thinking offensively.
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