The Next Hope Talk Schedule Announced
From July 16th – 18th 2010 in New York City the guys behind 2600 Magazine will be hosting The Next Hope, a conference for hackers of all types: amateurs, hobbyists, professionals and the generally curious.
Topics are wide and vary from IPv6 to Phone Phreaking, Disaster Relief to Graphic Novels and Cooking to DNS Sec – here’s the full talk schedule announced Monday (see table with abstracts here)…
Friday 16th
| Time | Tesla | Lovelace | Bell |
|---|---|---|---|
| 10:00 | IPv6 Playground: New Hope Update
Joe Klein |
GPS – It’s Not the Satellites That Know Where You Are
The Cheshire Catalyst |
|
| 11:00 | The State of Global Intelligence
Robert Steele |
Locational Privacy and Wholesale Surveillance via Photo Services
Ben Jackson |
Light, Color, and Perception
Jonathan Foote |
| 12:00 | Wireless Security: Killing Livers, Making Enemies
Dragorn, RenderMan |
Content of the Future
Greg Newby, Michael S. Hart |
SHODAN for Penetration Testers
Michael ‘theprez98′ Schearer |
| 13:00 | Keynote Address
Dan Kaminsky |
||
| 14:00 | (2 hours) | Digital: A Love Story
Christine Love, Jason Scott |
Examining Costs, Benefits, and Economics in Malware and Carding Markets
Dr. Thomas J. Holt |
| 15:00 | Arse Elektronika: Sex, Tech, and the Future of Screw-It-Yourself
Johannes Grenzfurthner |
Botnet Resistant Coding: Protecting Your Users from Script Kiddies
Fabian Rothschild, Peter Greko |
Electronic Take Back
John McNabb |
| 16:00 | Own Your Phone
TProphet |
Sita Sings the Blues: A Free Culture Success Story
Nina Paley |
Cooking for Geeks
Jeff Potter |
| 17:00 | Keeping Your Job While Being a Hacker
Alex Muentz |
“Brilliants Exploits” – A Look at the Vancouver 2010 Olympics
Colin Keigher |
Design of a Wireless EMG
Konstantin Avdashchenko |
| 18:00 | Tor and Internet Censorship
Jacob Appelbaum, Seth Schoen |
The OpenAMD Project
Aestetix, cpfr, Echo, Far McKon, Mitch Altman, Travis Goodspeed |
Lisp, The Oldest Language of the Future
Adam Tannir |
| 19:00 | Extreme Lockpicking
Barry Wels, Han Fey |
Easy Hacks on Telephone Entry Systems
Davi Ottenheimer |
Buying Privacy in Digitized Cities
Eleanor Saitta |
| 20:00 | Build Robots and See the World
Jonathan Foote |
Towards Open Libraries and Schools
Ellen Meier, Gillian ‘Gus’ Andrews, Jessamyn West |
Monkeysphere: Fixing Authentication on the Net
Daniel Kahn Gillmor, Jameson Rollins |
| 21:00 | Hackerspaces Forever: A Panel
Hackerspaces.org |
Introduction to the Chip Scene: Low Bit Music and Visuals
Don Miller, Joey Mariano, Peter Swimm |
Risk Analysis for Dummies
Nick Leghorn |
| 22:00 | (2 hours) | Electronic Waste: What’s Here and What’s Next
Stephanie Alarcon |
Detecting and Defending Your Network from Malware Using Nepenthes
Marco Figueroa |
| 23:00 | Get Lamp Screening and Discussion
Jason Scott |
Interaction with Sensors, Receivers, Haptics, and Augmented Reality (90 minutes)
Elle Mehrmand, Micha Cardenas / Azdel Slade, Pan, Ryan O’Horo, TradeMark G. |
Injecting Electromagnetic Pulses into Digital Devices
Paul F. Renda |
Saturday 17th
| Time | Tesla | Lovelace | Bell |
|---|---|---|---|
| 10:00 | How to Run an Open Source Hardware Company
Limor ‘Ladyada’ Fried, Phillip Torrone |
T+40: The Three Greatest Hacks of Apollo
Stephen Cass |
False Domain Name Billing and Other Scams
The Cheshire Catalyst |
| 11:00 | Video Surveillance, Society, and Your Face
Joshua Marpet |
Behind the Padlock: HTTPS Ubiquitous and Fragile
Seth Schoen |
Hacking Out a Graphic Novel
Ed Piskor |
| 12:00 | Grand Theft Lazlow – How Hacking is Both the Death and Future of Traditional and Interactive Publishing, Journalism, and the Media
Lazlow |
Vintage Computing
Bill Degnan, Evan Koblentz |
For Its Own Sake and to Build Something Better: A Primer on Neuroscience, Bat Echolocation, and Hacker Bio-inspiration
Scott Livingston |
| 13:00 | Keynote Address
Julian Assange |
||
| 14:00 | (2 hours) | A Red Team Exercise
Tom Brennan |
No Free Lunch: Privacy Risks and Issues in Online Gaming
Don Tobin, Lyndsey Brown |
| 15:00 | How to Bring Your Project from Idea to Reality: Make a Living Doing What You Love
Mitch Altman |
Geo-Tagging: Opting-In to Total Surveillance
Paul V |
Modern CrimeWare Tools and Techniques: An Analysis of Underground Resources
Alexander Heid |
| 16:00 | Snatch Those Waves: Prometheus Radio and the Fight for Popular Communications
Maggie Avener, Pete Tridish |
Memory Fun 101 – Memory Training for Everyone
Chester Santos |
Surf’s Up! Exploring Cross Site Request Forgery (CSRF) through Social Network Exploitation
Daniel McCarney |
| 17:00 | Privacy is Dead – Get Over It
Steven Rambam |
Smartphone Ownage: The State of Mobile Botnets and Rootkits
Jimmy Shah |
Much Ado About Randomness
Dr. Aleksandr Yampolskiy |
| 18:00 | (3 hours) | Free Software: Why We Need a Big Tent
Deb Nicholson |
Why You Should Be an Amateur
Ben Jackson |
| 19:00 | (3 hours) | Reach Out And Touch Face: A Rant About Failing
Johannes Grenzfurthner |
Hackers for Human Rights
Adrian Hong |
| 20:00 | Rummaging in the Government’s Attic: Lessons Learned from More Than 1,000 Freedom of Information Act Requests
Michael Ravnitzky, Phil Lapsley |
Hey, Don’t Call That Guy A Noob: Toward a More Welcoming Hacker Community
Nicolle (‘Rogueclown’) Neulist |
The Telephone Pioneers of America
Kyle Drosdick |
| 21:00 | Social Engineering
Emmanuel Goldstein |
Circuitbending
Jimmie Rodgers |
|
| 22:00 | Building and Breaking the Next HOPE Badge
Travis Goodspeed |
2600 Meetings: Yesterday, Today, and Tomorrow
Gonzo, Grey Frequency, Rob T Firefly |
PSTN-based Cartography
Da Beave, JFalcon |
| 23:00 | Net Wars Over Free Speech, Freedom, and Secrecy or How to Understand the Hacker and Lulz Battle Against the Church of Scientology
Finn Brunton, Gabriella Coleman |
Hacking Our Biochemistry: Pharmacy and the Hacker Perspective
Jennifer Ortiz |
Radio Reconnaissance in Penetration Testing – All Your RF Are Belong to Us
Matt Neely |
| 00:00 | Saturday Night Hacker Cinema | Spy Improv on Steroids – Steele Uncensored – Anything Goes
Robert Steele |
Sunday 18th
| Time | Tesla | Lovelace | Bell |
|---|---|---|---|
| 10:00 | The Need for a Computer Crime Innocence Project
Alex Muentz, Joe Cicero, Seth Schoen |
Hacking Your GPS
Cass Lewart |
Hacking Terrorist Networks Logically and Emotionally
Hat Trick, Mudsplatter |
| 11:00 | From Indymedia to Demand Media: Participation, Surveillance, and the Transformation of Journalism
Chris Anderson |
Hacking for an Audience: Technology Backstage at Live Shows
John Huntington |
Lock Bypass without Lockpicks
Dan Crowley |
| 12:00 | Cats and Mice: The Phone Company, the FBI, and the Phone Phreaks
Phil Lapsley |
Simpsons Already Did It – Where Do You Think the Name “Trojan” Came From Anyway?
Bill Cheswick, Matt Blaze, Sandy Clark (Mouse) |
Burning and Building Bridges: A Primer to Hacking the Education System
Christina ‘fabulous’ Pei |
| 13:00 | The DMCA and ACTA vs. Academic and Professional Research: How Misuse of This Intellectual Property Legislation Chills Research, Disclosure, and Innovation
Chris Mooney, Tiffany Rad |
American Bombe: How the U.S. Shattered the Enigma Code
Shalom Silbermintz |
TrackMeNot: Injecting Reasonable Doubt in Everyone’s Queries
Vincent Toubiana |
| 14:00 | Informants: Villains or Heroes? (90 minutes) | Into the Black: DPRK Exploration
Michael Kemp |
The Freedom Box: How to Reclaim Privacy on the Web
James Vasile |
| 15:00 | Hacking the Food Genome (15:30)
Gweeds |
CV Dazzle: Face Deception
Adam Harvey |
Bakeca.it DDoS – How Evil Forces Have Been Defeated
Alessio ‘mayhem’ Pennasilico |
| 16:00 | Hackers without Borders: Disaster Relief and Technology
Dennison Williams, Elena, Smokey |
The Black Suit Plan Isn’t Working – Now What?
James Arlen |
|
| 17:00 | The HOPE Network | Sniper Forensics – Changing the Landscape of Modern Forensics and Incident Response
Chris Pogue |
|
| 18:00 | Closing Ceremonies |
SQLBits V: Highlights from Friday Afternoon
Having attended the SQL Bits conference in Newport last month I decided to collate the little tips and tricks I learned at the event, in the challenging post-lunch session on Friday Thomas Kejser gave a talk on Designing I/O Systems for SQL Server – my notes from this talk are either short, sharp facts or references to thing I plan to research further…
The most important metrics are Throughput (measured in MB/sec or IOPS) and Latency (milliseconds).
A 10K RPM disk will give 100-130 IOPS, a 15K RPM disk will give 150-180 IOPS.
Performance can be increased by short-stroking disks, if you build a single partition on a drive using only 10% of it’s capacity this partition will reside physically on the outer edge of the disk. Doing this reduces the amount of head movement required to read the data and improves performance.
Windows Server 2008 handles disk alignment automatically but for earlier versions the offset should be 1024kb.
For testing the effect of configurations on performance use SQLIO.EXE or IOMeter, for stability testing use SQLIOSIM.
Check out the Pre-Deployment Best Practices Whitepaper from Microsoft.
The last talk of the day was by Allan Mitchell and was initially titled Common Integration Services Problems but was changed late-on to a more introductory Solving Problems in ETL using SSIS. The only take-away I got from the talk was to check out a tool called BIDS Helper, I have no criticism of Allan though – he’s a good speaker but in this case I already understood the bulk of the content so it was hard to stay focused.
Categories: Hardware, Microsoft SQL Server, SSIS, Tools & Utilities Tags: Allan Mitchell, BIDS, conference, DTS, IO, IOPS, Microsoft SQL Server, short stroking, SQL Server, SQLBits, SSIS, Thomas Kejser
SQLBits V: Highlights from Friday Morning
Having attended the SQL Bits conference in Newport last month I decided to collate the little tips and tricks I learned at the event, here are my highlights from Friday morning’s talks.
Simon Sabin kicked off the talks with a session on SQL Server 2008 Development Features, I’ve not had a good chance to try them out myself since I’m not on 2008 yet but the real highlight is the addition of the DATE and TIME data types – see my other post DATE and TIME Data Types in SQL Server 2008.
Management Studio now includes Intellisense which as been available in Visual Studio for a long time, it will automatically offer suggested keywords as well as table/object names whilst you type and can dramatically speed up your SQL writing. Also new in SSMS is the ability to debug your code and step through it line by line, the debugger will even step into and out of stored procedures and user-defined-functions – this will be a life saver for anyone working with a complex web of SPs.
Following Simon’s talk I headed into the intriguingly names T-SQL Tuning with Colin Chapman, Enzo Ferrari, and The Stig by Brent Ozar – with a title like that how could I not go? The talk turned out to be a great one and Brent’s a very entertaining speaker but all the time you get the feeling that he really knows what it feels like to be a DBA with production issues. Most of my notes from Brent’s talk don’t type-up well but he’s got some excellent resources on his site at http://brentozar.com/go/faster so please do check those out, my personal ‘take homes’ from his talk were to mine the DMVs for performance data, to use mirroring as a way to manage uptime during OS/SQL patch cycles, use a text-file to build a change log on servers and to read the Microsoft whitepaper on index defragmentation.
Categories: Business Intelligence, Events, Microsoft SQL Server Tags: Brent Ozar, conference, DBA, DMV, Microsoft SQL Server, simon sabin, SQL Server, SQLBits
SQLBits V: Keynote and Sponsor Talks
In November the fifth SQLBits conference took place in Newport, this time around the format differed slightly in that the regular ‘training day’ took place on a Thursday, there was a paid conference day on the Friday (only £99 for early takers) followed by the usual free Saturday conference. If you’ve never been to one of these events they’re well worth attending and it’s great to be in the company of so many people who understand the sort of environment you work in and who freely offer help and advice. More as a reminder for myself I thought I’d put together my personal highlights and little bits of information I learned whilst I was there.
The Keynote was given by Donald Farmer and showed took us on a journey through the challenges of BI from the perspective of a businessman from the 1920s who shared many of the same problems that we do in business today, it was quite an interesting angle and an amusing talk all-round. The address culminated in a demonstration of PowerPivot, a new BI technology centred around fetching large sets of data into a cube sitting behind Excel then allowing the users to perform Excel-like calculations as well as joining the data to other tables/spreadsheets. I believe that the tool is aimed at analyst-level users but the whole idea of putting large data sets in the hands of users (in the demo it was a million rows) and expecting them to manipulate it seems a little like a backwards step – isn’t the heavy lifting meant to be done on the server? Don’t get me wrong, if the demo was anything to go by I’m not too worried about performance – more concerned that many users just aren’t equipped to (and don’t want to) perform this level of analysis. I’ll watch with interest but colour me sceptical.
On both the Friday and Saturday I attended the Sponsor talks by Solid Quality Mentors, both given by Mark Whitehorn and both excellent. From past experience the sponsor talks vary between product demos and general advice but Mark’s talks took a “let’s think about something different” approach. Friday’s talk was about Social Data and considered what sort of social data large companies such as eBay and Facebook collect, how they can get the most out of it and in some cases why it can be considered more valuable than transactional data. We also had a bit of a discussion around the moral implications of collecting social data and whether or not it was legal or ethical in certain circumstances to use the data for marketing purposes or perhaps sell it on.
In addition to working with Solid Quality Mentors Mark is also a lecturer at the University of Dundee where there will soon be an MSc in Business Intelligence, and Saturday’s talk was based around some academic research he had been involved in (published in Nature). The research had involved manually collecting data from around 5,000 plant specimens originally sourced by John Stevens Henslow, a friend and lecturer of Darwin at Cambridge. The study used modern BI techniques including data mining and even a Bing Maps mashup to demonstrate that Henslow had been studying variation before Darwin had arrived at his theory and was quite likely to have been a strong influence on Darwin’s own thoughts on the subject that made him one of the world’s most famous scientists.
Categories: Business Intelligence, Events, Microsoft SQL Server Tags: conference, Donald Farmer, excel, Mark Whitehorn, powerpivot, SQLBits


