Media Summary: Today's attacks succeed because the defense is reactive”. I have been researching attacks and offensive techniques since the ... Hack lu 2016 Exploit generation and JavaScript analysis automation with WinDBG In this presentation we are going to explain and demonstrate step by step in a real attack scenario how a remote attacker could ...

Hack Lu 2016 Exploit Generation - Detailed Analysis & Overview

Today's attacks succeed because the defense is reactive”. I have been researching attacks and offensive techniques since the ... Hack lu 2016 Exploit generation and JavaScript analysis automation with WinDBG In this presentation we are going to explain and demonstrate step by step in a real attack scenario how a remote attacker could ... The presentation by Solomon Sonya. When was the last time you thought to yourself, hmm, I wonder if an attacker is ... allows a process the thing is running on its own and it prevents other processes from interfering with it or State actors dominate our news coverage, with hyperbolic talk of “cyberwar” and APT. But the vast majority of the costs of our ...

This talk aims to provide the fundamental architectural knowledge and resources for a security research interested in misuse of ... The growth of IoT devices continues to raise questions about their role and impact in cybersecurity. Badly configured or poorly ... During the course of a penetration test, a malware analysis, a forensic analysis or a Capture The Flag contest, who has never ... Similar to human fingerprints, every malware has its own unique digital fingerprint that differentiates it from others. As a result ...

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Hack.lu 2016 Exploit generation and JavaScript analysis automation with WinDBG
Hack.lu 2016 2016: The Infosec Crossroads by Saumil Shah
Hack lu 2016 Exploit generation and JavaScript analysis automation with WinDBG
Hack.lu 2016 Exploiting and attacking seismological networks… remotely by James Jara
Hack.lu 2016 WiFi Exploitation: How passive interception leads to active exploitation
Hack.lu 2016 Lightning Talk - Cracking An Egg And Cooking The Chicken by Jacob Torrey
Hack.lu 2016 A Network of Sorrows: Small Adversaries and Small Allies by Quinn Norton
Hack.lu 2016 Unveiling the attack chain of Russian-speaking cybercriminals
Hack.lu 2016 Stressed out? Denial of service attacks from the providers’ perspective
Hack.lu 2016 Bootstrapping an Architectural Research Platform by Jacob I. Torrey
Hack.lu 2016 Where should I host my malware? by Attila Marosi
Hack.lu 2016 The Metabrik Platform: Rapid Development of Reusable Security Tools by Patrice Auffret
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Hack.lu 2016 Exploit generation and JavaScript analysis automation with WinDBG

Hack.lu 2016 Exploit generation and JavaScript analysis automation with WinDBG

The

Hack.lu 2016 2016: The Infosec Crossroads by Saumil Shah

Hack.lu 2016 2016: The Infosec Crossroads by Saumil Shah

Today's attacks succeed because the defense is reactive”. I have been researching attacks and offensive techniques since the ...

Hack lu 2016 Exploit generation and JavaScript analysis automation with WinDBG

Hack lu 2016 Exploit generation and JavaScript analysis automation with WinDBG

Hack lu 2016 Exploit generation and JavaScript analysis automation with WinDBG

Hack.lu 2016 Exploiting and attacking seismological networks… remotely by James Jara

Hack.lu 2016 Exploiting and attacking seismological networks… remotely by James Jara

In this presentation we are going to explain and demonstrate step by step in a real attack scenario how a remote attacker could ...

Hack.lu 2016 WiFi Exploitation: How passive interception leads to active exploitation

Hack.lu 2016 WiFi Exploitation: How passive interception leads to active exploitation

The presentation by Solomon Sonya. When was the last time you thought to yourself, hmm, I wonder if an attacker is

Hack.lu 2016 Lightning Talk - Cracking An Egg And Cooking The Chicken by Jacob Torrey

Hack.lu 2016 Lightning Talk - Cracking An Egg And Cooking The Chicken by Jacob Torrey

... allows a process the thing is running on its own and it prevents other processes from interfering with it or

Hack.lu 2016 A Network of Sorrows: Small Adversaries and Small Allies by Quinn Norton

Hack.lu 2016 A Network of Sorrows: Small Adversaries and Small Allies by Quinn Norton

State actors dominate our news coverage, with hyperbolic talk of “cyberwar” and APT. But the vast majority of the costs of our ...

Hack.lu 2016 Unveiling the attack chain of Russian-speaking cybercriminals

Hack.lu 2016 Unveiling the attack chain of Russian-speaking cybercriminals

The

Hack.lu 2016 Stressed out? Denial of service attacks from the providers’ perspective

Hack.lu 2016 Stressed out? Denial of service attacks from the providers’ perspective

The

Hack.lu 2016 Bootstrapping an Architectural Research Platform by Jacob I. Torrey

Hack.lu 2016 Bootstrapping an Architectural Research Platform by Jacob I. Torrey

This talk aims to provide the fundamental architectural knowledge and resources for a security research interested in misuse of ...

Hack.lu 2016 Where should I host my malware? by Attila Marosi

Hack.lu 2016 Where should I host my malware? by Attila Marosi

The growth of IoT devices continues to raise questions about their role and impact in cybersecurity. Badly configured or poorly ...

Hack.lu 2016 The Metabrik Platform: Rapid Development of Reusable Security Tools by Patrice Auffret

Hack.lu 2016 The Metabrik Platform: Rapid Development of Reusable Security Tools by Patrice Auffret

During the course of a penetration test, a malware analysis, a forensic analysis or a Capture The Flag contest, who has never ...

Hack.lu 2016 KillTheHashes 30 million Malware DNA profiling exercise by Luciano Martins

Hack.lu 2016 KillTheHashes 30 million Malware DNA profiling exercise by Luciano Martins

Similar to human fingerprints, every malware has its own unique digital fingerprint that differentiates it from others. As a result ...