BSides Knoxville - May 5, 2017

I love BSides events. It's the simplest idea that has a tremendous impact on the information security. A lot of work goes into each BSides event and there are over 200 of them worldwide. I've been to two this year already in Huntsville and Indianapolis. It was my first time attending each of those conferences (one of the perks of moving to Nashville). I had an outstanding time at both. I was afforded the opportunity to speak and make some new connections with people in the industry. I will be attending Nashville next weekend and speaking at two more next month. Detroit and Knoxville.

What I love about BSides is that each one is unique. Huntsville is in rocket city. It is one of the simplest and well run conferences you can go to. The area is a lot like Augusta. Not much around, but a lot of really smart people. Indianapolis is similar in nature and a quite possibly the most laid back. It's located at a culinary school and I ate pastries all day. Nashville feeds its attendees with catered (YES CATERED!) barbecue from Martin's BBQ. I'd put the lunch up against any conference anywhere. I will be heading to Detroit next month for that BSides which coincides with Converge Detroit. I've bailed on the organizers two years in a row due to life changing events. Not this year, though! Flight and hotel are booked. 

Knoxville is another new conference for me this year. It's already turning out to be quite the unique experience for me. I am speaking at the event. Which is a bit of an outlier for me. I've submitted to three different conferences in Tennessee and BSides Knoxville is the only one that accepted my submission. It's fulfilling that dream and my dream to have a walk up song.

I'm a big baseball fan. My dream of coming out to a walk up song in professional baseball died a long time ago. In my adulthood, I've thought about what walk up song I would choose if I were given the opportunity. That day has arrived! Along with my presentation acceptance email were instructions on sending in my preferred walk up song. I only get 20 seconds, but that's all I need.

I started thinking about all my favorite songs. There were too many to make a choice from. I decided to take to Twitter to ask for suggestions. I got some really great responses. I also took the question to ColaSec a security user group in Columbia, SC. My talk is on kick starting an application security program, so I took the question to the development team I work with. I got some really weird and interesting response. I had about 20 potential songs, so I made a survey. From there I picked the top three and created a Twitter poll.

If you have Twitter I'd love for you to vote and share. I like all three songs in the poll, so I will absolutely use the poll winner for my walk up song. If you're going to BSides Knoxville I would highly recommend planning your schedule. It helps the organizers place talks in rooms and time slots. From talking to several organizers of security conferences scheduling is one of the most frustrating things. This will make scheduling easier for the organizers of Knoxville. They're putting on an awesome conference at a ridiculously good price. It's the least you can do.

If Knoxville is in your plans May 5, 2017, hit me up on Twitter and let me know you're attending. Or walk up and say "Hi!" (I don't Twitter at conferences anymore). I'm really excited for the conference and hope to see you there.

This post first appeared on Exploring Information Security.

Trends 2015 presented by IT-ology wrap-up

Trends 2015 presented by IT-ology was today and I am exhausted.

Every year in the fall IT-ology selects a technology topic to hold a conference on. This year was security, so naturally ColaSec was involved in providing speakers, volunteers, and marketing for the conference. Four keynote speakers filled the morning track and 12 speakers filled the afternoon tracks, which were split into technologist, civilian, and business. I presented a talk titled, "Low cost tools for security challenges" in the technologist track.

For those coming to my site who were in that talk, here are my slides and here are my videos (from previous conferences) of the talk. I got some good feedback from in regards to the talk, which was very much appreciated.

Trends 2015 was the last time I intended to give this particular talk. The recordings are out, my slides are out there, and I'd like to move onto some fresh content. What that is, I don't know yet, but I have some ideas. Before I move onto some fresh content, I want to compliment the video and slides of my talk with some blog posts that go a little more in-depth with the tools I presented. Over the next several weeks I intend to have a post a week, with step-by-step instructions on how to use each of the tools in my talk.

Thank you to everyone that made it to my talk and any feedback is still welcome.

This post first appeared on Exploring Information Security.

Heading to CircleCityCon

Early Thursday morning I will depart South Carolina and head North to Indianapolis, Indiana, for the three day security conference called Circle City Con. The conference is a three day event with training, speakers, and nightly entertainment that begins June 12, 2015, and ends June 14, 2015.
I am signed on as the photographer of the event to document with pictures all the fun things.

I would love to meetup with anyone going that I know, or even don't know. If you see me walking around the con stop me and say, "hi." Also, if anyone lives between South Carolina and Indiana and needs a ride, let me know. We might be able to work something out.

This post first appeared on Exploring Information Security.

Impressions from Bsides Nashville 2015

For the second year in a row, I traveled to Nashville this past weekend for it's local BSides security conference and like last year it was a wonderful conference to be apart of.

I took my camera again this year and I will have pictures from the conference before the end of the month is out. I've got school to wrap-up and several other things going on the next couple weeks. Time is very much at a premium for me right now, but I wanted to take a quick moment to highlight a couple of good things that happened at the conference.

First, I met several wonderful people this year, including: Amanda, Tim, Brett, Shelby, Frank, esSOBi, Adrian, and many many others. I also got to interact a little more with Lauren and Geoff and the rest of the BSides Nashville organizers this year, which was a treat. Putting together a security conference is a lot of work and they did a very good job again this year. I am already looking forward to next year.

The talks were again fantastic, though I didn't get to sit in as many as I did last year. A green track was added to the conference this year and it was completely packed for all the talks. There is a lot of interest in information security right now and there was proof in that track. I hope more security conferences, and in particular BSides, take note and start catering talks and content to people just starting out in security.

The one talk that stuck out to me the most was Johnny Xmas' "That's NOT my RJ45 Jack!: IRL Networking for Humans." The description is in the link and the talk is embedded below so I won't get into what makes the talk great. You'll just have to watch it. The one thing I will say is that this talk isn't just for security professionals. It's for professionals in general.

Watch it!

Almost forgot, the food was amazing again this year!

This post first appeared on Exploring Information Security.

BSides Nashville video project

I will be traveling to Nashville, TN, to attend BSides this weekend. For the second year in a row I will be running around the conference taking pictures. I'll also be shooting video this year, as part of my final project for a cinematography course I'm doing.

The idea is that I want to show hackers in a more positive light via a documentary style. The project is only required to be a few minutes long, so I won't need a ton of footage. I would like to setup some interviews before hand with some people to ask them what the term, "hacker" means to them. I also want to setup some interactions to shoot highlight some of the words people use in their interview. For example, words like family or community, I can use shots of people hugging, high-fiving, etc. Curiosity and a desire to learn I can use lock picking and shots of people in talks.

This is going to be a very fluid thing so I'd love to get the interviews done, then move onto getting shots of the conference. If anyone would be willing to help me with either item, I would very much appreciate it. Email me at timothy.deblock[at]gmail[dot]com.

This post first appeared on Exploring Information Security.