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london_cryptofestival:schedule [2013/11/30 11:01] – attm | london_cryptofestival:schedule [2013/12/23 19:46] – anonymous | ||
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====== London CryptoFestival 2013 Schedule ====== | ====== London CryptoFestival 2013 Schedule ====== | ||
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+ | **Update** - Some workshop materials such as slides and audio recordings of the panels are now available on the [[london_cryptofestival: | ||
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This is the (ever-mutating) schedule for [[: | This is the (ever-mutating) schedule for [[: | ||
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* **Understanding Crypto Tools** -- what all the buttons really do, and how they fit into the big picture that is your security. We will explain general security models in technical but non-mathematical terms. This is intended to give you a more precise awareness of what you accomplish during each phase of using a tool. We will teach a (sharp) bird' | * **Understanding Crypto Tools** -- what all the buttons really do, and how they fit into the big picture that is your security. We will explain general security models in technical but non-mathematical terms. This is intended to give you a more precise awareness of what you accomplish during each phase of using a tool. We will teach a (sharp) bird' | ||
- | * **Kitten Groomer** - Grooming the Kitten (or cleaning up possible malware from a USB using Raspberry PI) | + | * **[[ http:// |
* **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, | * **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, | ||
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* **Dog Ate My Crypto Keys 2.0** -- An overview of full-disk encryption solutions and lessons to learn in failures. We will discuss an open-source full-disk encryption setup, the de-facto best practice guidelines and then we will look at offensive security techniques that have been used to compromise full-disk encryption and explain mitigation strategies to help prevent unwanted eyes accessing your data. | * **Dog Ate My Crypto Keys 2.0** -- An overview of full-disk encryption solutions and lessons to learn in failures. We will discuss an open-source full-disk encryption setup, the de-facto best practice guidelines and then we will look at offensive security techniques that have been used to compromise full-disk encryption and explain mitigation strategies to help prevent unwanted eyes accessing your data. | ||
- | * **Bring & Swap** | + | * **Bring & Swap** |
* **/ | * **/ | ||
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* **Tell us your experience with digital security and crypto tools.** Cryptotools are like any other piece of software: they should be focused on what the user needs to do. Do you use cryptotools? | * **Tell us your experience with digital security and crypto tools.** Cryptotools are like any other piece of software: they should be focused on what the user needs to do. Do you use cryptotools? | ||
- | * **Analysis of surveillance** What is privacy really and why do we need it? Why is 'I Have Nothing To Hide' wrong on several levels (you life is not that boring!). We'll discuss the scope of surveillance problems, what can and can't (for now) be done about it and how to argue these issues with others (beginning with the tearing down of 'I Have Nothing To Hide' | + | * **Analysis of surveillance** What is privacy really and why do we need it? Why is 'I Have Nothing To Hide' wrong on several levels (you life is not that boring!). We'll discuss the scope of surveillance problems, what can and can't (for now) be done about it and how to argue these issues with others (beginning with the tearing down of 'I Have Nothing To Hide' |
====== Exhibitions ====== | ====== Exhibitions ====== |