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london_cryptofestival:schedule [2013/12/12 16:41] anonymouslondon_cryptofestival:schedule [2015/11/02 06:53] samthetechie
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 ====== London CryptoFestival 2013 Schedule ====== ====== London CryptoFestival 2013 Schedule ======
  
-**Update** - Workshop materials such as slides are currently in the process of being put online over on the [[london_cryptofestival:presentation_materials|presentation materials]] page.+**Update** - Some workshop materials such as slides and audio recordings of the panels are now available on the [[london_cryptofestival:presentation_materials|presentation materials]] page.
  
 This is the (ever-mutating) schedule for [[:london_cryptofestival|London CryptoFestival 2013]], taking place on 30 November 2013.  Sign up (under your choice of name :) on [[https://londoncryptofestival.eventbrite.co.uk/|eventbrite]]. This is the (ever-mutating) schedule for [[:london_cryptofestival|London CryptoFestival 2013]], taking place on 30 November 2013.  Sign up (under your choice of name :) on [[https://londoncryptofestival.eventbrite.co.uk/|eventbrite]].
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   * **Talk** -  is a visual communication program which copies lines from your terminal to that of another user. It first appeared in August 1983, included in the 4.2 release of BSD. Originally developed as a way for two users on a Unix network to converse via typing, talk is basically a communication between TTY (TeleTYpewriter). Although not secure on a LAN, unless the two machines are connected by a properly encrypted VPN, it is still an old school, simple way to communicate on a server, as safe as the server is. During this brief workshop we will demo the application, try to snoop it, then look at an alternative.  Requisites: ssh access to a remote terminal, a friend to talk to, confidential data to be discussed, and the desire for (server) intimacy.  [[http://xname.cc/|xname]] - presents a workshop on the TALK protocol.   * **Talk** -  is a visual communication program which copies lines from your terminal to that of another user. It first appeared in August 1983, included in the 4.2 release of BSD. Originally developed as a way for two users on a Unix network to converse via typing, talk is basically a communication between TTY (TeleTYpewriter). Although not secure on a LAN, unless the two machines are connected by a properly encrypted VPN, it is still an old school, simple way to communicate on a server, as safe as the server is. During this brief workshop we will demo the application, try to snoop it, then look at an alternative.  Requisites: ssh access to a remote terminal, a friend to talk to, confidential data to be discussed, and the desire for (server) intimacy.  [[http://xname.cc/|xname]] - presents a workshop on the TALK protocol.
  
-  * **A Primer on Physical Security** -- An introduction to thinking about physec in two parts: I) how to find hardware bugs with a counter-surveillance budget of £0: creating a low-rent physical intrusion detection system; and II) taking document destruction seriously: shredder anti-forensics. +  * **A Primer on Physical Security** -- An introduction to thinking about physec in two parts: I) how to find hardware bugs with a counter-surveillance budget of £0: creating a low-rent [[:physical_intrusion_detection|physical intrusion detection]] system; and II) taking document destruction seriously: shredder anti-forensics. 
  
   *  **Private VoIP** -- How to have private voice and video conversations via the Internet. Jitsi, ZRTP, SIP, XMPP, csipsimple, Open WhisperSystems RedPhone, Zphone, SilentCircle.   *  **Private VoIP** -- How to have private voice and video conversations via the Internet. Jitsi, ZRTP, SIP, XMPP, csipsimple, Open WhisperSystems RedPhone, Zphone, SilentCircle.