What a strange time. Last week I was literally walking the red carpet at the Hollywood premiere of Michael Mann. I The link for this article located at Wired is no longer available. . Films often reflect societal concerns about cybersecurity, shaping public perception of Congress's role in tech policy and legislative urgency on cyber threats. Congress Awareness, Cybersecurity Culture, Film Analysis, Hollywood Insights. . Dave Wreski
DEF CON, which began as a relatively small get-together for members of the IS underground, has grown in recent years to become the world's largest and most publicized annual gathering of the diverse groups that comprise Information Systems Security. But despite . . . . DEF CON, which began as a relatively small get-together for members of the IS underground, has grown in recent years to become the world's largest and most publicized annual gathering of the diverse groups that comprise Information Systems Security. But despite its growth and more-or-less-mainstream success (measured in numbers and news articles), DEF CON is first and foremost for hackers. The term "hacker" carries a lot of baggage, and, popular belief to the contrary, many people who call themselves hackers don't break into other people's systems. (Okay, maybe occasionally the systems of people they know, but not anybody who'd mind.) Whether one defines hackers as "computer criminals" or as "those who push computers, networks and even society beyond their creators' imagined limits", the term still has connotations of not-quite-strict legality and nonconformance taken to extremes. So a few years ago DEF CON's creator, the Dark Tangent (aka Jeff Moss), decided it might be useful to precede DEF CON with an event more friendly to corporate and other "button-down" info-sec types. With the help of some corporate sponsorship he created Black Hat Briefings. The link for this article located at Linux Journal is no longer available. . DEF CON, founded by Jeff Moss in 1993, has evolved into a major hacker convention fostering innovation, collaboration, and community in cybersecurity. DEF CON Experience, Cybersecurity Culture, Hacking Events, Tech Conferences. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
Cult of the Dead Cow (cDc) put on their usual extravaganza here Saturday at the Hacking on Planet Earth 2000 (H2K) conference. Last year at DEF CON 7.O, I reported on the hacking group releasing the . . . . Cult of the Dead Cow (cDc) put on their usual extravaganza here Saturday at the Hacking on Planet Earth 2000 (H2K) conference. Last year at DEF CON 7.O, I reported on the hacking group releasing the (debatably) great Back Orifice 2000 application in a sight and sound spectacular, but this year there was more fluff than stuff. cDc's presentation set the tone by starting out with an audio track of a farmer and his daughter's encounter with a possessed disemboweled attack cow, and progressed to a lip syncing performance by the cDc front man Grand Master Ratte, and onto one of the most bizarre skits I've ever seen. The link for this article located at ZDNet is no longer available. . The Society of the Gloomy Sheep's eccentric event during CyberFest captivated attendees with whimsical acts and entertaining sketches.. Cult of the Dead Cow,H2K conference,cybersecurity culture,hacking performances. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
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