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AppSec Brasil 2010

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Para a versão em português, veja em AppSec Brasil 2010 (pt-br)

OWASP AppSec Brasil 2010

The Second Edition of OWASP's flagship conference in South America will happen in Campinas, SP, Brazil. The Conference consists of two days of training sessions, followed by a two-day conference on a single track.

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Conference Dates

The conference will happen from November 16th, 2010 to November 19th, 2010. The first two days will be tutorial days (see below). Plenary sessions will be held on November 18th and 19th.


About

About the conference

Following the success of the first AppSec Brasil, held in Brasilia in 2009, the OWASP Brazilian Chapter is organizing its second edition in 2010. AppSec Brasil 2010 will happen in the city of Campinas, located 90 km from São Paulo.

Campinas is the 3rd biggest city in the State of São Paulo and is an important economic center and hosts major universities and research centers. It is known to concentrate several high tech industries, including important multi-national companies in the fields of electronics, telecom and chemicals.

This year, we expect to gather a number of Brazilian and Latin American practitioners and researchers to share state-of-the-art information about application security.

Sponsorship

We are currently soliciting sponsors for the AppSec Brasil 2010 Conference. Detailed sponsorship oportunities are now available.

If you are interested in sponsoring AppSec Brasil 2010, please contact the Conference Organization Team ([email protected]).

Sponsors

Platinum Sponsors

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Gold Sponsors

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Silver Sponsors

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Attendee Kit Sponsors

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Local Promotion

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Keynotes

Robert 'Rsnake' Hansen

SecTheory

Title: The Humble Cookie

Abstract: The simplest thing in our browser that has caused the most confusion and worry is the cookie. This presentation will discuss what it is, how cookies work, the little known aspects of them, and dozens of attacks to steal them, set them, crack them or abuse trust based on them.

Bio: Robert Hansen aka RSnake is the CEO and founder of SecTheory. He has worked for Digital Island, Exodus Communications and Cable & Wireless in varying roles from Sr. Security Architect and eventually product managing many of the managed security services product lines. He also worked at eBay as a Sr. Global Product Manager of Trust and Safety, focusing on anti-phishing, anti-DHTML malware and anti-virus strategies. Later he worked as a director of product management for Realtor.com. Robert sits on the advisory board for the Intrepidus Group, previously sat on the technical advisory board of ClickForensics and currently contributes to the security strategy of several startup companies.

Mr. Hansen wrote Detecting Malice, authors content on O'Reilly and co-authored "XSS Exploits" by Syngress publishing. He sits on the NIST.gov Software Assurance Metrics and Tool Evaluation group focusing on web application security scanners and the Web Application Security Scanners Evaluation Criteria (WASC-WASSEC) group. He also has briefed the DoD at the Pentagon and speaks at SourceBoston, Secure360, GFIRST/US-CERT, CSI, Toorcon, APWG, ISSA, TRISC, World OWASP/WASC conferences, SANS, Microsoft's Bluehat, Blackhat, DefCon, SecTor, BSides, Networld+Interop, and has been the keynote speaker at the New York Cyber Security Conference, NITES and OWASP Appsec Asia. Mr. Hansen is a member of Infragard, West Austin Rotary, WASC, IACSP, APWG, contributed to the OWASP 2.0 guide and is on the OWASP Connections Committee.

Robert also maintains the http://ha.ckers.org website where he discuss web application security and provides lots of useful content to be used against web application attacks.

Jeremiah Grossman

WhiteHat Security

Title: Facilitating Application Security Maturity

Abstract: Over the last ten years a fast growing number of organizations, from the largest of the large to the smallest of the small, are truly starting to "get" Web application security. They are also learning that application security success does not happen overnight. Experience and results, especially results, takes time. Some organizations have indeed demonstrated an ability to improve faster than others. The question is, how? What separates the leaders from the laggards is the way their teams utilize time and allocate resources to best facilitate application security maturity.

Having worked with hundreds of organizations, many of which easily considered leaders in their industry, what I've found is a consistent set of stages that characterize where on the maturity continuum they are located. This is insight is key. An application security professional's ability to quickly identify a given organizations current stage of maturity is vital. For example, a trusted advisor may provide a new student different guidance than to that of a subject matter expert facing identical challenges. It is all about isolating needs, encouraging progression, and serving outcomes that are in the best interests of all involved. By sharing my related personal experiences I hope to facilitate the application maturity of the entire industry.

Bio: Jeremiah Grossman, founder and CTO, WhiteHat Security, is a world-renowned Web security expert. A co-founder of the Web Application Security Consortium (WASC), he was named to InfoWorld's Top 25 CTOs in 2007 and is frequently quoted by business and technical media. He has authored dozens of articles and whitepapers, is credited with the discovery of many cutting-edge attack and defensive techniques, and is a co-author of "XSS Attacks: Cross Site Scripting Exploits and Defense." Grossman is also an influential blogger who offers insight and encourages open dialogue regarding Web security research and trends. Prior to WhiteHat, Grossman was an information security officer at Yahoo!


Invited Speakers

Samy Kamkar

Title: How I Met Your Girlfriend: The discovery and execution of entirely new classes of Web attacks in order to meet your girlfriend.

Abstract: This includes entertaining and newly discovered attacks including PHP session prediction and random numbers (accurately guessing PHP session cookies), browser protocol confusion (turning a browser into an SMTP server), firewall and NAT penetration via Javascript (turning your router against you), remote iPhone Google Maps hijacking (iPhone penetration combined with HTTP man-in-themiddle), extracting extremely accurate geolocation information from a Web browser (not using IP geolocation), and more.

Bio: Samy Kamkar is best known for the Samy worm, the first XSS worm, infecting over one million users on MySpace in less than 24 hours. A cofounder of Fonality, Inc., an IP PBX company, Samy previously led the development of all top-level domain name server software and systems for Global Domains International (.ws).

In the past 10 years, Samy has focused on evolutionary and genetic algorithmic software development, Voice over IP software development, automated security and vulnerability research in network security, reverse engineering, and network gaming. When not strapped behind the Matrix, Samy can be found stunt driving and getting involved in local community service projects.

Mano Paul

Title: Wild Wild Wild Security Planet

Abstract: Organisms keep themselves safe in a world that's every bit as unpredictable as our world. This presentation will parallel what we can learn from the world of art, literature, science, nature and apply it to the world of software security. For e.g., If Shakespeare had to write about software security, what would he write? What does a naked motorist have to do with loose lips that sink ships? What does pH have to do with software vulnerabilities? What does the Stick Insects' regenerative ability have to do with software 'bugs'? or can the Ostrich sticking its head in the sand behavior reflect the modicum of risk management we observe today and many more ...

The talk would be a fun-filled, extremely interactive session covering various concepts of security from risk management, defense in depth, secure programming, threats and vulnerabilities and compliance and more ... Come to find out the answers to the questions above and see what it takes to develop software with a security mindset throughout its life cycle. Come and look at software security from a different perspective that would make ALL the difference for you and your company.

Bio:

Mano Paul

Shark Researcher turned Security Guru!
Manoranjan (Mano) Paul (CSSLP, CISSP, AMBCI, MCSD, MCAD, CompTIA Network+, ECSA) is the Founder and CEO at SecuRisk Solutions and Express Certifications. Based out of Austin, Texas in the USA, SecuRisk Solutions specializes in three areas of information security solutions - Product Development, Consulting and Awareness, Training & Education while Express Certifications focuses on professional certifications like the CISSP, SSCP, CSSLP and the BCI certificate.

Before SecuRisk Solutions and Express Certifications, Mano played several roles from software developer, quality assurance tester, logistics manager, technical architect, IT strategist and Security Engineer/Program Manager/Strategist at Dell Inc. His information security experience includes designing and developing software security programs from Compliance-to-Coding, application security risk management, security strategy & management, and conducting security awareness training and education.

Mano started his career as a shark researcher in the Bimini Biological Field Station, Bahamas. His educational pursuit took him to the University of Oklahoma where he received his Business Administration degree in Management Information Systems (MIS) with various accolades and the coveted 4.0 GPA. He was a member and chair of the OWASP Global Education Committee and actively participates in OWASP speaking, training and leadership events. He is also the appointed Software Assurance Advisor for (ISC)2, representing and advising the organization on software assurance strategy, training, education and certification. He is an appointed faculty member and industry representative of the Capitol of Texas Information System Security Association (ISSA) chapter.

Mano has been featured in various domestic and international security conferences and is an invited speaker and panelist, delivering talks and keynotes in conferences such as the OWASP, CSI, Burton Group Catalyst, TRISC and SC World Congress conferences. He is the author of the Official (ISC)2 Guide to the Certified Secure Software Lifecycle Professional (CSSLPCM), contributing author for the Information Security Management Handbook, writes periodically for the Certification Magazine and has contributed to several security topics for the Microsoft Solutions Developer Network (MSDN).

Mano is married to whom he calls the “most wonderful and sacrificial person in this world” - Sangeetha Johnson and their greatest fulfillment comes from spending time with the son – Reuben A Paul (RAP).

Chris Hofmann

Title: Making the Next Generation of Browsers More Secure.

Abstract: Chris will talk about security features going into Firefox 4 and other next generation browsers including CSP, CSS history sniffing fixes, STS, and more. We will also talk about how you can get involved and provide input in development, testing, and using these features that will shaping the future of the web.

Bio: As director of engineering and Special Projects at the Mozilla Foundation and Corporation over the last 7 years, Chris Hofmann has spearheaded the research and development work of thousands of open source contributors around the world.

A Netscape employee before joining Mozilla, Chris contributed to every Netscape and Mozilla browser release since 1996.

As the first employee at the Mozilla Foundation in August 2003, Chris led a small but devoted team of the original ten engineers that established the Mozilla Foundation as an independent and self-sustaining organization.

In 2004, Chris managed and executed the first worldwide release of Mozilla Firefox 1.0. Firefox 1.0 helped to fulfill the Mozilla Foundation’s goal of supporting open Web standards and provide innovation and choice for Internet client software and set Firefox on a path to remarkable market share growth over the last several years.

Chris now helps to build and strengthen Mozilla communities around the world. These contributors and communities are involved with localization of Firefox in to over 70 languages, extend Firefox with Addons, and provide support to Firefox users. He engages with security researchers to help improve browser security and manages Mozilla's Security Bug Bounty Program. He is also interested in engaging, helping, and promoting the work done in companies and large institutions to deploy Firefox use and Mozilla technology.

Speakers

Cassio Goldschmidt

Symantec

Title: Responsibility for the Harm and Risk of Software Security Flaws

Abstract: Who is responsible for the harm and risk of security flaws? The advent of worldwide networks such as the internet made software security (or the lack of software security) became a problem of international proportions. There are no mathematical/statistical risk models available today to assess networked systems with interdependent failures. Without this tool, decision-makers are bound to overinvest in activities that don’t generate the desired return on investment or under invest on mitigations, risking dreadful consequences. Experience suggests that no party is solely responsible for the harm and risk of software security flaws but a model of partial responsibility can only emerge once the duties and motivations of all parties are examine and understood.

State of the art practices in software development won’t guarantee products free of flaws. The infinite principles of mathematics are not properly implemented in modern computer hardware without having to truncate numbers and calculations. Many of the most common operating systems, network protocols and programming languages used today were first conceived without the basic principles of security in mind. Compromises are made to maintain compatibility of newer versions of these systems with previous versions. Evolving software inherits all flaws and risks that are present in this layered and interdependent solution. Lastly, there are no formal ways to prove software correctness using neither mathematics nor definitive authority to assert the absence of vulnerabilities. The slightest coding error can lead to a fatal flaw. Without a doubt, vulnerabilities in software applications will continue to be part of our daily lives for years to come.

Decisions made by adopters such as whether to install a patch, upgrade a system or employed insecure configurations create externalities that have implications on the security of other systems. Proper cyber hygiene and education are vital to stop the proliferation of computer worms, viruses and botnets. Furthermore, end users, corporations and large governments directly influence software vendors’ decisions to invest on security by voting with their money every time software is purchased or pirated.

Security researchers largely influence the overall state of software security depending on the approach taken to disclose findings. While many believe full disclosure practices helped the software industry to advance security in the past, several of the most devastating computer worms were created by borrowing from information detailed by researcher’s full disclosure. Both incentives and penalties were created for security researchers: a number of stories of vendors suing security researchers are available in the press. Some countries enacted laws banning the use and development of “hacking tools”. At the same time, companies such as iDefense promoted the creation of a market for security vulnerabilities providing rewards that are larger than a year’s worth of salary for a software practitioner in countries such as China and India.

Effective policy and standards can serve as leverage to fix the problem either by providing incentives or penalties. Attempts such PCI created a perverse incentive that diverted decision makers’ goals to compliance instead of security. Stiff mandates and ineffective laws have been observed internationally. Given the fast pace of the industry, laws to combat software vulnerabilities may become obsolete before they are enacted. Alternatively, the government can use its own buying power to encourage adoption of good security standards. One example of this is the Federal Desktop Core Configuration (FDCC).

Bio: Cassio Goldschmidt is senior manager of the product security team under the Office of the CTO at Symantec Corporation. In this role he leads efforts across the company to ensure secure development of software products. His responsibilities include managing Symantec’s internal secure software development process, training, threat modeling, penetration testing and vulnerability manegement. Cassio’s background includes over 14 years of technical and managerial experience in the software industry. During the eight years he has been with Symantec, he has helped to architect, design and develop several top selling product releases, conducted numerous security classes, and coordinated various penetration tests. Cassio is also known for leading the OWASP chapter in Los Angeles and is a frequent speaker at security conferences worldwide.

Cassio represents Symantec on the SAFECode technical committee and (ISC)2 in the development of the CSSLP certification. He holds a bachelor degree in computer science from Pontificia Universidade Catolica do Rio Grande Do Sul, a masters degree in software engineering from Santa Clara University, and a masters of business administration from the University of Southern California.

Amichai Shulman

Imperva

Title: Business Logic Attacks – BATs and BLBs

Other authors: Amichai Shulman, Rob Rachwald

Abstract: Cyber attacks are being committed more often by professionals, and are increasingly driven by financial motives. Researchers have discovered the increasing popularity of a certain class of attacks that target business logic. Business logic attacks are a set of legal application transactions that are used to carry out a malicious operation that is not part of normal business practices. For example, brute forcing coupon codes in an ecommerce application to receive multiple discounts. This presentation will provide a quick introduction to business logic attacks, their unique characteristics and the motivation behind their uptick. The session will suggest a classification method for these attacks from which attendees can draw a set of required mitigation capabilities. We will discuss capabilities required for detecting automated interaction with the application, different types of repetitions, flow tampering and even compromised credentials. We will also contemplate on the usage of mitigation techniques such as Captcha, introducing delays and more. Concluding this session we will bring up the claim that all these capabilities can be introduced in the form of a "virtual patch" using a web application firewall, rather than being exclusively fixed in application code.

Bio: Amichai Shulman is Co-Founder and CTO of Imperva, where he heads the Application Defense Center (ADC), Imperva's internationally recognized research organization focused on security and compliance. Mr. Shulman regularly lectures at trade conferences and delivers monthly eSeminars. The press draws on Mr. Shulman's expertise to comment on breaking news, including security breaches, mitigation techniques, and related technologies. Under his direction, the ADC has been credited with the discovery of serious vulnerabilities in commercial Web application and database products, including Oracle, IBM, and Microsoft. Prior to Imperva, Mr. Shulman was founder and CTO of Edvice Security Services Ltd., a consulting group that provided application and database security services to major financial institutions, including Web and database penetration testing and security strategy, design and implementation. Mr. Shulman served in the Israel Defense Forces, where he led a team that identified new computer attack and defense techniques. He has B.Sc and Masters Degrees in Computer Science from the Technion, Israel Institute of Technology.

Gabriel Quadros

Conviso IT Security

Title: Taint Analysis of JavaScript Code to Detect Web Application Vulnerabilities

Abstract: Modern Web applications make increasing use of client-side code, with JavaScript being the most present in most of them. Several vulnerabilities are introduced through the careless use of this language. The publicly available analysis tools are usually based on pattern matching to find potential vulnerabilities, but this is not an efficient approach to analyze large amounts of code. Therefore, there is a need to develop tools to perform more advanced analysis like Taint Analysis and Symbolic Execution. This article discusses various approaches to dynamic analysis of JavaScript code and presents the JsInstrumentator tool, which is being developed by Conviso Security Labs.

Bio: Gabriel Quadros começou a estudar segurança da informação em 2003, com interesse principal em engenharia reversa, pesquisa de vulnerabilidades e desenvolvimento de exploits.

Atualmente cursa o último ano do Bacharelado em Ciência da Computação na Universidade Estadual do Sudoeste da Bahia - UESB.

Em abril de 2010, começou suas atividades como consultor de segurança na Conviso IT Security.

Tony Rodrigues

Provider IT Business Solutions

Title: Tony’s Top 10 Application Artifacts: A Computer Forensics Approach to OWASP Top 10

Abstract: Application Computer Forensics has many peculiarities comparing to others Computer Forensics disciplines. It requires not only distinctive techniques but also deep knowledge of specific artifacts. This presentation is about the top ten artifacts related to application computer forensics/digital investigations and their relation to OWASP Top 10 Risks.

Bio: Tony Rodrigues é um profissional certificado CISSP, CFCP e Security+ com mais de 20 anos de experiência em TI e 8 anos em Gestão de Segurança de Informações. Já liderou várias investigações, perícias e pesquisas sobre Computação Forense. Tony é consultor em Segurança de Informações e palestrou em importantes conferencias internacionais (CNASI, H2HC,YSTS). É autor/criador do blog forcomp.blogspot.com, sobre Resposta a Incidentes e Forense Computacional e também colabora com artigos no blog de Computer Forensics da SANS.

Henrich Christopher Pöhls

University of Passau - ISL

Title: The State of XML Digital Signatures --- How to Avoid Technical Pitfalls and Harvest the Power of Newer Signature Schemes

Abstract: XML Digital Signatures are a complex tool, applied right they help to ensure legal compliance, but there are many pitfalls. This talk will provide some basic steps that users and implementers should follow to avoid the pitfalls, among them are:

  • Solid Understanding of the XML Signature processing and verification steps
  • Use of simplistic and coherent references when creating XML Digital Signature
  • Know how to Test what was signed before acting upon it (BitFlip Test)

The Talk will also provide an overview of new applications for recent and more specialized digital signature schemes, like sanitizable signature schemes (academic research since roughly 2000) that allow to deal with the need to modify already signed content. And it will highlight the security relevant changes that are planned for the upcoming version of XML Signature Syntax and Processing 2.0.

Bio: Henrich C. Pöhls has presented his scientific work on digital signatures at several academic conferences (i.e. ICICS, GI, Invited Talks) or to technical audiences (i.e. DFN CERT, OWASP). Instructor of a practical IT-security university class for Computer Science and IT-Security Master students for the last 7 years. He has established this course first at the University of Hamburg in 2004 and than at the University of Passau in 2008. The course, now titled "Security Infrastructures", is centered around security infrastructures focussing on secure & authenticated access through the use of digital signatures.

It involves setting-up a certificate authority, using digital signatures and X509 certificates mostly for authentication in open-source software like client and server authentication with apache, secure DNS zone transfers, or client and server authentication in openvpn, as well as in MS Windows environments.It also covers certificate revocation using CRLs and OCSP. Henrich C. Pöhls draws from a rich repository of his own experience from his academic research in the field and the 7 years of using the available tools for creating, applying and managing digital signatures and X509 certificates in different versions and seeing his students struggle with the pitfalls trying to get it to work.

Rodrigo Montoro

Trustwave Spiderlabs

Title: Web Application First Aid - Virtual Patching with ModSecurity

Abstract: This presentation will show how to mitigate security problems that you may found after your application goes to the real world . Weʼll talk about how to analyze a security report, understand how modsecurity works and how based on the report to create a virtual patching using modsecurity rules.

Bio: Rodrigo “Sp0oKeR” Montoro possui grande experiência em ambientes opensource e mercado de segurança especialmente na parte de IPS/IDS , malwares e protocolos. Atualmente trabalha no time de pesquisas do SpiderLabs (Trustwave) onde faz parte do core team de assinaturas do modsecurity além de analise de malwares, assinaturas de IDS e pesquisas na area de arquivos maliciosos especialmente pdfʼs.

Brian Contos

McAfee

Title: Exploring Three Modern Attack Vectors: Insiders, Industrialized and APTs

Abstract: Attacks are coming from all angles. In some cases they are very rudimentary; in others they are highly complex. Organizations must be able to protect themselves regardless, and do so in a way this is in parity with business operations, maintains employee and partner agility, and is manageable without the complexity of the solution being worse than the attack itself.

Failure to address these three different attack types can result in everything from diminished brand loyalty, regulatory penalties, and lost revenue, to stolen intellectual property, economic competitive disadvantage, and military competitive disadvantage. Based on research from McAfee Labs and customer interactions across the globe in the public and private sector, there is much information that can be shared about these attackers and their strategies.

Attendees will leave the presentation more knowledgeable about insider threats, industrialized hacking, and APTs. They will have a strong grasp of the attacker motives and understand their attack vectors. The audience will also be exposed to several non-vender, non-product specific countermeasures that they can leverage within their own organizations.

Bio: Mr. Contos has over 15 years of security engineering and management expertise. He has worked throughout North and South America, Europe, the Middle East, and Asia. At McAfee he advises government organizations and G2000s on security strategy. He has written two books including Enemy at the Water Cooler – Real Life Stories of Insider Threats, and Physical and Logical Security Convergence which he co-authored with former NSA Deputy Director William Crowell. He has delivered speeches at industry events like RSA, Black Hat, Interop, OWASP, CSI, ISACA, ISSA, InfraGard and eCrime. He is often quoted by business and industry press, and has written articles for Forbes, NY Times, London Times, Computerworld, and many others. He was formerly the Chief Security Strategist for Imperva, the Chief Security Officer for ArcSight, and has held management and engineering positions at Riptech, Bell Labs, Tandem Computers, and DISA.

Christophe De La Fuente

Title: Testing and Fuzzing FLEX: More fun with RIA

Additional author: Matt Tesauro

Abstract: FLEX is a popular choice for the brave new world of web 2.0 applications. While the game may have appeared to change, rich Internet applications (RIA) still allow for the same vulnerabilities and design mistakes to be made. This presentation will cover methods for testing Adobe FLEX applications including the new version 4 and will look at such issues as cross-­-site flashing, remote calls and fuzzing. Additionally, there will be coverage of tools to test FLEX and other Flash applications including their addition to the OWASP WTE (Web Testing Environment). Finally, some design issues which may hamper FLEX development will be discussed in a brief case study.

Bio: Christophe is a Security Consultant within the Application Security practice at Trustwave's SpiderLabs. SpiderLabs is the advanced security team responsible for Penetration Testing, Application Security, and Incident Response for Trustwave's clients.

Christophe has extensive experience in penetration tests on web application and network infrastructure. He has a background testing a large range of applications, from traditional client/server applications to web applications and web services. In addition to his information security experience, Christophe has experience developing software and web applications. Christophe also has an interest in reverse code engineering for malware analysis and vulnerability research. He as taught post-­-graduate level university course in the field of web application security testing.

Mauro Risonho de Paula Assumpção

Title: The Tao of Hacking - Detecting Vulnerabilities in Web based Network Devices

Abstract: This talks relates to the design flaws and vulnerabilities in various network peripheral devices used for security which are having web interfaces. We will be talking about some of the vulnerabilities that we have discovered while pen testing these devices. Further , this talk also lays emphasis on collecting information about internal networks from the network devices like load balancers, firewalls, disk stations, proxies, surveillance cameras etc. The aim is to gather maximum infomation from these devices and using that information to test the security of these devices and detecting vulnerabilities in them. This talk is pure conceptual and technical talk designed in an easy way to share information among masses.

Bio: Mr. Mauro Assumpção Cheshire Paula aka firebits is a security researcher and lecturer at security conferences. He is working as director of NSEC Security Systems, an organization that provides consulting services for security and penetration testing. He has performed numerous safety tests and development projects for organizations such as Intel, Google, Microsiga, Avon, CMS Energy, Unilever, Rhodia, Tostines, Degussa, Niplan and others. He is founder and "Backtrack Brazil" and moderator and translator Backtrack USA.

Aditya K Sood is a Security Researcher, consultant and PhD candidate in Computer Science Department at Michigan State University.He has worked in the security domain for Armorize, COSEINC and KPMG. He is a founder of SecNiche Security, an independent security research arena. He has been an active speaker at conferences like RSA (US 2010), TRISC, EuSecwest, XCON, Troopers, OWASP AppSec, FOSS, CERT-IN etc. He has writtencontent for HITB Ezine, Hakin9, Usenix Login, Elsevier Journals, De­bugged! MZ/PE.He has released number of advisories to forefront companies.Apart from his normal routine work he loves to do lot of web based research and designing cutting edge attack vector.

Schedule

Conference Program - Day 1 - November 18th 2010

08:30 - 09:00 Reception Desk Open
09:00 - 09:40 Opening Ceremony
09:40 - 10:30 Dinis Cruz
About OWASP
10:30 - 10:50 Break
10:50 - 11:50 Robert 'RSnake' Hansen
The Humble Cookie
11:50 - 12:40 Amichai Shulman
Business Logic Attacks – BATs and BLBs
12:40 - 14:30 Lunch Break
14:30 - 15:20 Chris Hofmann
Making the Next Generation of Browsers More Secure.
15:20 - 16:10 Mano Paul
Wild Wild Wild Security Planet
16:10 - 16:30 Break
16:30 - 17:20 Tony Rodrigues
Tony’s Top 10 Application Artifacts: A Computer Forensics Approach to OWASP Top 10
17:20 - 18:10 Cassio Goldschmidt
Responsibility for the Harm and Risk of Software Security Flaws
18:10 - 19:00 Gabriel Quadros
Taint Analysis of JavaScript Code to Detect Web Application Vulnerabilities
19:00 End of the First Day


Conference Program - Day 2 - November 19th 2010

08:30 - 09:00 Reception Desk Open
09:00 - 10:00 Jeremiah Grossman
Facilitating Application Security Maturity
10:00 - 10:50 Henrich Christopher Pöhls
The State of XML Digital Signatures --- How to Avoid Technical Pitfalls and Harvest the Power of Newer Signature Schemes
10:50 - 11:10 Break
11:10 - 12:00 Rodrigo Montoro
Web Application First Aid - Virtual Patching with ModSecurity
12:00 - 12:30 Cel. Antonio Carlos Menna Barreto Monclaro
Presentation of Renasic - National Network for Information Security and Cryptography
12:30 - 14:30 Lunch Break
14:30 - 15:20 Samy Kamkar
How I met your girlfriend
15:20 - 16:10 Christophe De La Fuente
Testing and Fuzzing FLEX: More fun with RIA
16:10 - 17:00 Bian Contos
Exploring Three Modern Attack Vectors: Insiders, Industrialized and APTs
17:00 - 17:20 Break
17:20 - 18:10 Mauro Risonho de Paula Assumpção
The Tao of Hacking - Detecting Vulnerabilities in Web based Network Devices
18:10 - 18:50 Dinis Cruz
OWASP O2 Project
18:50 - 19:00 Closing Ceremony


Trainings

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Secure Coding for J2EE Applications

Jasonli appsecBR2010.jpg
Date and time: November 16th and 17th
Instructor: Jason Li
Summary
Training developers on secure coding practices offers one of the highest returns on investment of any security investment by eliminating vulnerabilities at the source. Aspect’s Java EE Secure Coding Training raises developer awareness of application security issues and provides examples of ‘what to do’ and ‘what not to do.' The class is lead by an experienced developer and is delivered in a very interactive manner. This class includes hands-on exercises where the students get to perform security analysis and testing on a live Java EE web application. This specially designed environment includes deliberate flaws the students have to find, diagnose, and fix. The class also uses Java EE coding exercises to provide students with realistic hands-on secure coding experience. Students gain hands-on experience using freely available web application security test tools to find and diagnose flaws and learn to avoid them in their own code.

Audience
The intended audience for this course is intended for Java EE software developers and Java EE software testers who know how to program.

Learning Objectives
At the highest level, the objective for this course is to ensure that developers are capable of designing, building, and testing secure Java EE applications and understand why this is important.

Topics

  • HTTP Fundamentals
    • Understand and be able to employ the security features involved with using HTTP (e.g., headers, cookies, SSL)
  • Design Principles and Patterns
    • Understand and be able to apply application security design principles.
  • Threats
    • Be able to identify and explain common web application security threats (e.g. , cross-site scripting, SQL injection, denial of service attacks, "Man-in-the-middle" attacks, etc.) and implement mitigation techniques.
  • Authentication and Session Management
    • Be able to handle credentials securely while providing the full range of authentication support functions, including login, change password, forgot password, remember password, logout, reauthentication, and timeouts.
  • Access Control
    • Be able to implement access control rules for the user interface, business logic, and data layers.
  • Input Validation
    • Be able to recognize potential input validation issues, particularly injection and Cross-site Scripting (XSS) problems, and implement appropriate input validation mechanisms for user input and other sources of input.
  • Command Injection
    • Understand the dangers of command injection and techniques for avoiding the introduction of this type vulnerability.
  • Error Handling
    • Be able to implement a consistent error (exception) handling and logging approach for an entire web application.
  • Cryptography
    • Learn when to apply cryptographic techniques and be able to choose algorithms and use encryption/decryption and hash functions securely.

Jason’s Bio
Jason is a remarkable trainer, mastering five different training courses within a year’s time to our most valuable longstanding but diverse clients. The client base included a large financial institution, several leading shipping and logistics Management Company, and a leading Government systems integrator.

Jason has also taught Advanced Web Application Security Testing and Building Secure Web Applications classes at OWASP 2008 conferences in Belgium and India.

Common remarks returned from Jason’s class evaluations include “This is probably one of the most important classes I‘ve been exposed to here” and “One of the best instructors I’ve ever had. Really knowledgeable of the subject. Kept class interested by sharing real life examples that depicted good scenarios”

Using the OWASP ESAPI security API to provide security to web applications

Tutorial in Portuguese.

Date and time: November 16th (9AM to 6PM)
Instructor: Tarcizio Vieira Neto

Summary

The evolution of technology in the development of web applications has contributed to a significant increase in the use of this technology to meet the most diverse purposes. However, this technology is subject to critical security vulnerabilities, especially when recent research show that most vulnerabilities are present in the application itself. OWASP's ESAPI library (Enterprise Security API) appears in this scenario as an open source security library available for several languages such as Java EE, PHP,. NET, Classic ASP, Python, Ruby, among others. This short course addresses the vulnerabilities caused by common errors in applications development and security control mechanisms provided by ESAPI with focus on Java technology. The general principles learned in the course can be applied in the context of other programming languages.

Target audience

The desired profile of the audience are people connected to the area of web application development and security, having as a basic pre-requisite knowledge in web technologies, communication protocols HTTP and HTTPS, basic principles of security: encryption, hashing and digital signature, Java programming for Web systems.


Learning objectives

  • Know the main security vulnerabilities commonly found in Web applications
  • Present the architecture of the ESAPI library and the operation of its modules with examples in Java.
  • Present Web Application Firewall component of ESAPI.


Tópic

  1. Introduction
  2. # Myths related to security in Web applications
  3. # OWASP Project
  4. OWASP Top 10
  5. OWASP ESAPI Library
  6. # Validation and Encoding Module
  7. # Authentication Module
  8. # Access Control Module
  9. # HTTP Utilities Module
  10. # Access references module
  11. # Cryptographic Module
  12. # Log Module
  13. # Intrusion Detection Module
  14. # integrating the AppSensor module with ESAPI
  15. # Using Filters
  16. # Configuring ESAPI
  17. # Web Application Firewall Module
  18. Benefits of Using ESAPI
  19. Conclusions


Instructor

Tarcízio Vieira Neto has a degree in Computer Science from Universidade Federal de Goiás (UFG), in Goiania. He began his career as an intern developer on a project of technology initiation funded by CNPq in the company Estratégia, in Goiania. After graduating he worked for six months at the company Fibonacci Soluções Ágeis in the same city, as a development analyst. Then worked for two years and eight months as a Brazilian Air Force officer as a systems analyst in the Air Force Computer Center in Brasilia, where he gained experience with the technologies of digital certification and collaborated in the development of an enterprise electronic document management system.

Currently working at SERPRO since November 2009 as an Analyst in CETEC, working on software development security, dedicated primarily in writing guidelines that standardize techniques and tools tho support security in Web applications development

He is attending a specialization course in Information Security from University of Brasília (UnB) and has altogether more than five years of programming experience in Java.


The Art and Science of Threat Modeling Web Applications

Mano Paul

This tutorial is in English without translation.

Date and Time: November 17 (9AM to 6PM)
Instructor: Mano Paul

Summary

To secure your home, you will first need to know how the thief could possibly enter and exit and where you should store your valuables. The same is true of your web applications. Unless you know what the vulnerabilities and threats of your web applications are, and what security measures you should take to protect them, ev1L h@x0rS or the enemy within (insider) could take advantage of the vulnerabilities.

Threat Modeling is a technique that you can use to identify ATVS (attacks, threats, vulnerabilities and safeguards) that could affect your web applications. Threat Modeling helps in designing your application securely from a confidentiality, integrity, availability, authentication, authorization and auditing perspective. It is an essential activity to be undertaken during the design stage of your SDLC and helps mitigate and minimize overall risk.


Target audience

The target audience is made of technical staff and management of system development organizations, with no required knowledge of languages or specific programming techniques.


Learning Objectives

  1. Understand Threat Modeling; when to threat model and when not too
  2. Translation of threats to risks for the organization
  3. Have fun learning complex concepts with exercises and interactive games


Topic

  1. Introduction
  2. Why Threat Model?
  3. Is Threat Modeling Right for You?
  4. Challenges
  5. Precursors
  6. Data Classification and Threat Modeling
  7. Web Application Security Mechanisms
  8. Benefits of Threat Modeling
  9. Common Glossary of Terms
  10. Threat Agents
  11. OWASP Top 10 and common application attacks
  12. Threat Modeling Process
  13. Attack Trees
  14. Threat and Risk Frameworks e.g., STRIDE and DREAD
  15. Threat to Risk translation
  16. Threat Modeling (Hands-On Exercise)


Instructor

Manoranjan (Mano) Paul is the Software Assurance Advisor for (ISC)2. His information security and software assurance experience includes designing and developing security programs from compliance-to-coding, security in the SDLC, writing secure code, risk management, security strategy, and security awareness training and education. He founded and serves as the CEO & President of Express Certifications. He also founded SecuRisk Solutions, a company that specializes in security product development and consulting.

Security in Service-oriented architectures

Unfortunately this course has been cancelled.


Black-Box & White-Box ASP.NET Security Reviews using the OWASP O2 Platform

Thsi tutorial will be in Portuguese with materials in English

Date and time: November 16th (9AM to 6 PM)
Instructor: Dinis Cruz

Summary

This is a hands-on Training course on how to use the OWASP O2 Platform to perform both Black-Box and White-Box security reviews on ASP.NET Web Applications

The course is designed for security consultants/developers who are responsible for performing Penetration Tests or Security Code Reviews. The course will show practical examples of how to use the OWASP O2 Platform to find, exploit and document security vulnerabities.

For the course's labs, a number of test and real-world applications/frameworks will be used. In order to give the students a benign test enviroment which is easy to replicate, the (vulnerable-by-design) HacmeBank ASP.NET banking application will be used throughout the course.

Topics

  • What is the OWASP O2 Platform and how to use it?
  • Using O2's Unit Tests for web exploration and browsing
  • Using O2's Unit Tests for web exploitation
  • Understanding and using O2's Web Automation Tools to find and exploit vulnerabilities in HacmeBank (Black-Box)
  • Understanding and using O2's AST .NET Scanner to find vulnerabilities in HacmeBank (White-Box)
  • Connecting the source-code traces with the web exploits to create a unified view of the vulnerabilties
  • Create 'Vulnerability-driven Unit Tests' to be delivered to Developers, QA/Testers and Managers
  • Customizing and writing new APIs (for new or modified frameworks)
  • Using O2 to consume results from open source tools and 3rd party commercial vendors
  • Case Study: Microsoft ASP.NET MVC
  • Case Study: Microsoft Sharpoint


Instructor

The course is delivered by Dinis Cruz who the lead developer of the OWASP O2 Platform and has created and delivered a number of .NET Security training courses

Location

Please check the Venue tab in this page.

Venue

The event will be held in Campinas, SP, Brazil at: Fundação CPQD.

You can check the location at Google Maps

How to get there

TBD

Registration

Online Registration

Registration form is available at https://creator.zoho.com/lucas.ferreira/appsec/

Conference Fees

Access to conference:

  • Before Sep 16th: 400.00 BRL
  • Before Oct 16th: 500.00 BRL
  • Before Nov 12th: 550.00 BRL
  • On site: 600.00 BRL

On site registration subject to the availability of seats.

Trainings

  • One day: 450.00 BRL
  • Two days: 900.00 BRL

Discounts

  • OWASP Member: 100.00 BRL (Note: This discount is greater than the OWASP USD 50.00 annual fee. Check here
  • Student: 100.00 BRL (Note: student ID required).
  • Special discounts available for groups registrations. Please send inquiries to [email protected]

Committees

Conference Committee

OWASP Global Conferences Committee Chair: Mark Bristow

OWASP Brazilian Chapter Leader: Wagner Elias

AppSec Brasil 2010 Organization Team (organizacao2010 at appsecbrasil.org):

  • Conference General Chair: Lucas C. Ferreira
  • Tutorials Chair: Eduardo Camargo Neves
  • Tracks Chair: Luiz Otávio Duarte
  • Local Chair: Alexandre Melo Braga

Team Members

  • Alexandre Melo Braga
  • Eduardo Camargo Neves
  • Lucas C. Ferreira
  • Luiz Otávio Duarte
  • Wagner Elias
  • Eduardo Alves Nonato da Silva
  • Leonardo Buonsanti
  • Dinis Cruz
  • Paulo Coimbra


Programme Committee:

  • Alexandre Braga
  • Carlos Serrao
  • Eduardo alves
  • Fernando Cima
  • Leonardo Buonsanti
  • Lucas Ferreira
  • Luiz Duarte
  • Nelson Uto
  • Rodrigo Rubira
  • Wagner Elias



Accommodations

Suggested Hotels

COMFORT SUITES

Comfort.jpg

Special prices for OWASP AppSec Brazil 2010!

  • Please note that prices are in Brazilian currency. Feel free to convert to your country's currency with the most up-to-date rates.
Plus 5% taxes
Room Type Single Double
Superior R$ 173,00 R$ 203,00
Deluxe R$ 215,00 R$ 245,00
  • Hotel site.
  • Located 5 minutes from the event venue.
  • Breakfast.
  • Free parking.
  • Payment: Cash or credit card.
  • 24 hour restaurant.
  • Business center, fitness center and pool.
  • Free shuttle to three nearby malls.

To make your bookings with special prices, please call (5519) 2137 9000 and tell about the OWASP Event or click here, and add the following text to the message body:

I would like to book a room for the following days:    
(   ) 15/11  (   )16/11  (   )17/11  (   )18/11  (   )19/11
(   ) single             (   ) double
(   ) superior           (   ) deluxe
Waiting for confirmation and payment instructions.
Name:
Passport number:

SLEEP IN

Sleepin.jpg

Special prices for OWASP AppSec Brazil 2010!

  • Please note that prices are in Brazilian currency. Feel free to convert to your country's currency with the most up-to-date rates.
Plus 5% taxes
Room type Single Double
Superior R$ 162,00 R$ 192,00
Deluxe R$ 184,00 R$ 214,00
  • Hotel site.
  • Located 10 minutes from the event venue.
  • Free parking.
  • Payment: Cash or credit card.
  • Dinner served at the Coffee Shop, Monday to Thursday from 7pm to 10pm.
  • Business center, fitness center and pool.
  • Free shuttle to three nearby malls.

To make your bookings with special prices, please call (5519) 2137 2200 and tell about the OWASP Event or click here and add the following text to the message body:

I would like to book a room for the following days:    
(   ) 15/11  (   )16/11  (   )17/11  (   )18/11  (   )19/11
(   ) single             (   ) double
(   ) superior           (   ) deluxe
Waiting for confirmation and payment instructions.
Name:
Passport number:

Twitter

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Links

Blog: http://blog.appsecbrasil.org

Twitter: http://twitter.com/owaspappsecbr

Banner: AppSec_Brasil_2010_Banner.gif

Powerpoint template: Media:OWASP_Presentation_Template_BrazilAppSec2010.ppt

Pictures: http://picasaweb.google.com/lucas.ferreira/AppSecBrasil2010?feat=directlink