CodeCon is the premier showcase of active hacker projects. It is an excellent opportunity for developers to demonstrate their work, and for coding hackers to find out about what's going on in their community. All presentations must be accompanied by . . . . CodeCon is the premier showcase of active hacker projects. It is an excellent opportunity for developers to demonstrate their work, and for coding hackers to find out about what's going on in their community. All presentations must be accompanied by functional applications, ideally open source. Presenters must be one of the active developers of the code in question. We emphasize that demonstrations be of *working* code, and reproducible by other people. Throughout the event, we will have several kiosks and local servers available for demonstration purposes. CodeCon strongly encourages presenters from non-commercial and academic backgrounds to attend for the purposes of collaboration and the sharing of knowledge by providing free registration to workshop presenters and discounted registration to full-time students. We hereby solicit papers and demonstrations. * Papers and proposals due: December 1, 2002 * Authors notified: December 15, 2002 * Demonstration materials due: January 15, 2003 The focus of CodeCon is on working applications which: * enhance individual power and liberty * can be discussed freely, either by virtue of being open source or having a published protocol, and preferably free of intellectual property restrictions * are generally useful, either directly to a large number of users, or as an example of technology applicable to a larger audience * demonstrate novelty in technical approaches, security assumptions, and end-user functionality Possible topics include, but are by no means restricted to: * development tools - languages, debuggers, version control * file sharing systems - swarming distribution, distributed search * community-based web sites - forums, weblogs, personals * securityproducts - mail encryption, intrusion detection, firewalls Presentations will be a 45 minutes long, with 15 minutes allocated for Q&A. Overruns will be truncated. Submission details: Submissions are being accepted immediately. Acceptance dates are September 1, November 1, and December 1. On each acceptance date, submissions will be either accepted, rejected, or deferred to the next acceptance date. The conference language is English. All submissions should be accompanied by source code or an application. When possible, we would prefer that the application be available for interactive use during the workshop, either on a presenter-provided demonstration machine or one of the conference kiosks. Ideally, demonstrations should be usable by attendees with 802.11b connected devices either via a web interface, or locally on Windows, UNIX-like, or MacOS platforms. Cross-platform applications are most desirable. Our venue may be 21+. If you are submitting and are under 21, please advise the program committee; we may consider alternate venues for one or more days of the event. If you have a specific day on which you would prefer to present, please advise us. To submit, send mail to
The 10th anniversary of what has become the largest hacker convention on the planet! DEF CON 10 will be August 2nd to the 4th at the Alexis Park Hotel and Resort in Las Vegas, Nevada, USA.. . .. The 10th anniversary of what has become the largest hacker convention on the planet! DEF CON 10 will be August 2nd to the 4th at the Alexis Park Hotel and Resort in Las Vegas, Nevada, USA. D E F C O N 10 C O N V E N T I O N D E F C O N 10 C O N V E N T I O N DEF CON 10 CONVENTION D E F C O N 10 C O N V E N T I O N > > READ AND DISTRIBUTE AND READ AND DISTRIBUTE AND READ AND Call for Papers Speaking
Tired of conferences not living up to your expectations? Then you haven't been to Usenix. In this month's Wizard's Guide to Security, Carole Fennelly reports that Usenix's recent security conference offered interesting and accessible talks -- and a who's who of . . . . Tired of conferences not living up to your expectations? Then you haven't been to Usenix. In this month's Wizard's Guide to Security, Carole Fennelly reports that Usenix's recent security conference offered interesting and accessible talks -- and a who's who of security experts to schmooze with. I wasn't disappointed. In fact, I wondered why I'd waited so long to attend a Usenix conference. It was probably because I felt that I could just read the research papers instead of actually attending, but that's like shunning a concert with backstage passes because you can buy a CD. There's so much more to the live conference than the purely technical presentations. This article describes my view of the conference -- it's by no means a complete picture, as it's impossible for one person to attend every talk. For a complete review of the conference, I urge you to get the November 2000 issue of ;login magazine (a publication of Usenix and SAGE). The link for this article located at SunWorld is no longer available. . Frustrated with events that fall short of their promises? Learn how Usenix sets a new standard!. Usenix Security, Conference Review, Networking Events. . Anthony Pell
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