"Shmoocon 2014" is a PDF drawn from the Internet Archive and catalogued under Computer Science for High School (9–12). From the source: Shmoocon 2014: Held in Washington D.C. from January 17-19, 2014, at the Washington Hilton. This collection contains all recorded main area talks at the event. DIFFERENT - ShmooCon is an annual east coast hacker convention… Slide Collection preserves the upstream link, the original creator credit and the licensing terms; download the file to use it in a classroom, study group or revision plan.
About this presentation
Shmoocon 2014: Held in Washington D.C. from January 17-19, 2014, at the Washington Hilton. This collection contains all recorded main area talks at the event. DIFFERENT - ShmooCon is an annual east coast hacker convention hell-bent on offering three days of an interesting atmosphere for demonstrating technology exploitation, inventive software and hardware solutions, and open discussions of critical infosec issues. The first day is a single track of speed talks called One Track Mind. The next two days bring three tracks: Build It, Belay It and Bring It On. AFFORDABLE - ShmooCon is about high quality without the high price. Keep in mind that space is limited, and we've sold out quickly every year. ACCESSIBLE - ShmooCon is held in Washington, DC at the Washington Hilton about four blocks from the DC Metro's Dupont Circle Station. Fly into DCA, IAD or BWI or take a train to Union Station, and you're just a short cab ride away from the con. ENTERTAINING - Brain melting from all the cool tech you're learning? Be sure to check out the other events running during ShmooCon, including ShmooCon Labs, the Lockpick Village, Ghost in the Shellcode and more. The Shmoo Group is a think-tank of like-minded individuals who share a passion for information security research and development. TSG members' expertise incorporates field-dressing a moose to extragalactic astrophysics to Python capabilities, cutting-edge wearable computing to encryption to sharp-shooting. The group mind adds a razor-sharp sense of sarcasm to a refusal to take anything about the Internet seriously, mixed liberally with tequila, community service, wireless networking and RFID hackery. Schedule Friday, January 17, 2014 Time One Track Mind 1230 Registration Opens 1430 Opening Remarks, Rumblings, and Rants Bruce Potter 1530 Attacker Ghost Stories: Mostly Free Defenses That Give Attackers Nightmares Mubix "Rob" Fuller 1600 The Evolution of Linux Kernel Module Signing Rebecca ".bx" Shapiro 1630 How Hackers for Charity (Possibly) Saved Me a Lot of Money Branden Miller and Emily Miller 1700 CCTV: Setup, Attack Vectors, and Laws Joshua Schroeder and Spencer Brooks 1730 Security Analytics: Less Hype, More Data Aaron Gee-Clough 1800 Dissipation of Hackers in the Enterprise Weasel 1830 Keynote Address Privacy Online: What Now? Ian Goldberg 1945 Friday Fire Talks Saturday, January 18, 2014 Time Build It! Belay It! Bring it On! 0930 Registration Opens 1000 Genuinely "Trusted Computing:" Free and Open Hardware Security Modules Ryan Lackey Introducing DARPA's Cyber Grand Challenge Mike Walker Technology Law Issues for Security Professionals Shannon Brown 1100 Malicious Threats, Vulnerabilities, and Defenses in WhatsApp and Mobile Instant Messaging Platforms Jaime Sanchez and Pablo San Emeterio Unambiguous Encapsulation - Separating Data and Signaling Dominic Spill and Michael Ossmann I Found a Thing and You Can (Should) Too: ISP's Unauthenticated SOAP Service = Find (Almost) All The Things! Nicholas Popovich 1200 SafeCurves: Choosing Safe Curves for Elliptic-Curve Cryptography Daniel J. Bernstein and Tanja Lange A Critical Review of Spatial Analysis David Giametta and Andrew Potter Arms Race: The Story of (In)-Secure Bootloaders Lee Harrison and Kang Li 1300 Lunch Break 1400 Controlling USB Flash Drive Controllers: Expose of Hidden Features Richard Harman Data Whales and Troll Tears: Beat the Odds in InfoSec Davi Ottenheimer and Allison Miller Syncing Mentorship Between Winners And Beginners Tarah Wheeler Van Vlack and Liz Dahlstrom 1500 0wn the Con The Shmoo Group Operationalizing Threat Information Sharing: Beyond Policies and Platitudes Sean Barnum and Aharon Chernin The NSA: Capabilities and Countermeasures Bruce Schneier 1600 AV Evasion With the Veil Framework Part 2) Christopher Truncer, Will Schroeder, and Michael Wright The "Science of Cyber" and the Next Generation of Security Tools Paulo Shakarian How to Train your Snapdragon: Exploring Power Frameworks on Android Josh "m0nk" Thomas 1700 ADD -- Complicating Memory Forensics Through Memory Disarray Jake Williams and Alissa Torres Timing-Based Attestation: Sexy Defense, or the Sexiest? Xeno Kovah, Corey Kallenberg, and John Butterworth LTE vs. Darwin Hendrik Schmidt and Brian Butterly 1815 Saturday Fire Talks 2015 Saturday Night Party @ The Hilton, International Center Ballroom Paul and Storm DJs: Keith Meyers, Zack Fasel, and Erin Jacobs Sunday, January 19, 2014 Time Build It! Belay It! Bring it On! 0930 Registration Opens 1000 An Open and Affordable USB Man in the Middle Device Dominic Spill "How I Met Your Mother" or The Brief and Secret History of Bletchley Park and How They Invented Cryptography and the Computer Age Benjamin Gatti Malicious Online Activities Related to the 2012 U.S. General Election Joshua Franklin, Robert Tarlecki, Matthew Jablonski, and Dr. Damon McCoy 1100 unROP: A Tool for In-Memory ROP Exploitation Detection and Traceback Kang Li, Xiaoning Li, and Lee Harrison Raising Costs for Your Attackers Instead of Your CFO Aaron Beuhring and Kyle Salous Vehicle Forensics - The Data Beyond the Dashboard Courtney Lancaster 1200 Introducing idb - Simplified Blackbox iOS App Pentesting Daniel A. Mayer Practical Applications of Data Science in Detection Mike Sconzo and Brian Wylie You Don't Have the Evidence Scott Moulton 1300 Room Split Break 1330 Closing Plenary Large Scale Network and Application Scanning Bruce Potter (moderator), Robert David Graham, Paul McMillan, Dan Tentler, and Alejandro Caceres 1430 Closing Remarks
How to study this deck
Computer-science slides are deceptively dense. Code snippets and diagrams collapse hours of design decisions into a few lines, so resist the urge to skim. Run the snippets locally, change one variable, and observe what breaks.
High-school audiences can handle the full vocabulary and most of the formal reasoning, but the deck still benefits from explicit "why does this matter?" framing at section breaks.
Five questions to test your understanding
- What is the single most important claim on the first three slides, and what evidence is offered for it?
- Which slide could you remove without losing the argument? Which slide is load-bearing?
- Where does the deck switch from definitions to applications? Mark that transition.
- What would a student who already disagreed with the conclusion need to see to be convinced?
- Which two slides, if combined, would give the clearest one-slide summary of the whole deck?
Where this deck fits in the wider catalogue
Slide Collection classifies this presentation under Computer Science, alongside other openly-licensed material in the same subject. If you are preparing a unit at the High School (9–12) level, the dedicated combined Computer Science · High School (9–12) page is the fastest way to find adjacent decks with the same audience in mind.
Citation & reuse
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