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Black Hat, DefCon and B-Sides survival guide, 2012


From: InfoSec News <alerts () infosecnews org>
Date: Wed, 11 Jul 2012 02:27:34 -0500 (CDT)

http://blogs.csoonline.com/security-leadership/2252/black-hat-defcon-and-b-sides-survival-guide-2012

By Bill Brenner
Salted Hash
CSO.com
July 10, 2012

In two weeks a lot of us will head to Las Vegas for Black Hat, DefCon or BSidesLV. Having been to many Black Hat and B-Sides events, along with countless other events in the last eight years, I've learned plenty about how to get the most from the experience. And so, for the first-time attendee, I offer the following survival tips:


Don't let the noise get to you

Black Hat in particular is a noisy event. The vendors, in an effort to really fit in with the attitude of the conference, come up with all kinds of theatrics. One year, a guy was dressed up as a "Mad Russian" hacker mastermind. His attire was a cross between Captain Caveman, Charles Manson and Rasputin. I don't remember the vendor he worked for. I also remember that between sessions, it's hard to move around as people mingle in the middle of crowds rushing from one talk to the next.

The talks themselves are often surrounded by drama, though that part has calmed down in the last couple of years. Sometimes a vendor will try to stop a talk about exploits for a vulnerability in their products. Lawyers are brought in and a mess ensues. This happened in 2005, when Cisco moved to squash a talk by then-ISS researcher Michael Lynn on an exploitable issue with Cisco's IOS router operating system. The move proved to be a waste of time for Cisco, since the story got out anyway. But what was worse, in my opinion, was that a lot of good talks went unreported in the media because everyone was too busy chasing the hype over this one talk.

My advice here is to remember what you do in your day-to-day job, find the talks that most closely address the challenges you want to overcome and don't let drama and noise divert you from the plan.

[...]


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