This site is the archived OWASP Foundation Wiki and is no longer accepting Account Requests.
To view the new OWASP Foundation website, please visit https://owasp.org

Difference between revisions of "Bay Area"

From OWASP
Jump to: navigation, search
(Agenda)
(added leaders)
 
(167 intermediate revisions by 13 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
{{Chapter Template|chaptername=Bay Area|extra=|mailinglistsite=http://lists.owasp.org/mailman/listinfo/owasp-bayarea|emailarchives=http://lists.owasp.org/pipermail/owasp-bayarea}}
 
  
==== Local News  ====
+
= Bay Area Chapter Board =  
 +
Interested in finding out more? Will contact you with information on the first in person chapter board discussion in San Francisco
  
<paypal>Bay Area</paypal>
+
Submit your info here: https://goo.gl/forms/ScPCPrlDiQaUZ6cs2
  
==== Chapter Meetings ====
+
= Chapter Meetings =
  
== Date and Location ==
+
Bay Area OWASP Chapter meetings are posted on our meetup!
  
OWASP Bay Area will host its next Application Security Summit at the Fujitsu Offices in Sunnyvale on February 25th. As usual attendance is free and food and beverages will be provided. This will be an awesome event and a great opportunity to network with industry peers. The event is open to the public; please forward this invite to your colleagues and friends who are interested in computer and application security. We have an excellent line-up of speakers.  
+
Please visit http://www.meetup.com/Bay-Area-OWASP/ for all chapter event information.
  
Please note that due to security issues, your must pre-register. The registration will ask you for citizenship/permanent residence status as well. Badges will be ready for the registered attendees at the lobby where you will check in.  
+
== Our next  event ==
 +
We hold regular events across the OWASP Bay Area.  
  
WHAT: OWASP Bay Area Chapter - Application Security Summit WHEN: Thursday, February 25th, 2010 - From 1 P.M. to 8.00 P.M. (including a reception from 6.30 to 8.00)
+
Check out our meetup page for upcoming events:
 +
[http://www.meetup.com/Bay-Area-OWASP/events/226890416/? More info on meetup.com]
  
WHERE: Fujitsu Offices, Sunnyvale - See below for directions
+
{{Chapter Template|chaptername=Bay Area|extra=|mailinglistsite=http://lists.owasp.org/mailman/listinfo/owasp-bayarea|emailarchives=http://lists.owasp.org/pipermail/owasp-bayarea}}
 +
[[File:Highres 469396345.jpg|center|thumb|868x868px]]
  
<br>
+
[[File:OWASP Cali.jpg|center|thumb|825x825px]]
  
Venue and Directions:  
+
[[File:March 2018.jpg|thumb|848x848px]]
  
Fujitsu Sunnyvale Campus (Building H) 1250 E. Arques Avenue Sunnyvale, CA 94085
+
[[File:OWASP-Bay-Area-Aug-2014.png]]
  
Fujitsu Policy&nbsp;: Please note that you will be asked to sign and write down your country of citizenship in order to comply with US Customs regulations and C/TPAT (Customs Trade Partnership Against Terrorism) certifications. As part of the compliance, we regrettably are not able to allow attendance to those who hold the citizenship of Cuba, Iran, North Korea, Sudan, or Syria without a US Green Card. We sincerely apologize for any inconvenience this may cause.
+
Picture is @BenHagen talking about cloud security and applications
  
<br>
+
= About OWASP Bay Area Chapter=
 +
== Geographic Area of Bay Area Chapter ==
  
REGISTER EARLY AS SEATING IS LIMITED
+
The 'Bay Area' is actually the San Francisco Bay Area in California, which is near other large towns that are across the bay from San Francisco such as Berkeley and Oakland, and south of San Francisco are San Mateo, Palo Alto, and the whole San Jose area.  Currently, the Bay Area OWASP Chapter covers this whole geographic region.
  
Please RSVP by registering at http://owaspbayarea-feb2010.eventbrite.com/
+
== Become a Presenter ==
 +
Submit your talk now for an upcoming OWASP Bay Area Chapter Meeting
  
== Agenda  ==
+
[https://docs.google.com/a/owasp.org/forms/d/1ImmfY5KtSILjIym1uToOzSmT2Xv58bVzfxUPDAAn9-c/viewform Link to submit]
  
{| cellspacing="1" cellpadding="1" border="1" style="width: 1021px; height: 373px;"
+
=== Notes about OWASP presentations ===
|+ Agenda
+
OWASP presentations are geared for a technical audience. We are particularly interested in new approaches to tackling application security problems, defensive techniques for new technology in the application security space and lessons learned from developers and security professionals tackling application security. Please consider a wide breadth of topic areas and we can discuss if they should be tailored in a particular direction for the OWASP audience.
|-
 
| 1.00 PM - 1.15 PM<br>
 
| Check-in, registration, networking<br>
 
|-
 
| 1:15 PM - 1:30 PM<br>
 
| Welcome Remarks and Overview of OWASP Bay Area - Mandeep Khera, Bay Area Chapter Leader [File:OWASP Mandeep Khera BA FEb10.ppt]<br>
 
|-
 
| 1:30 PM - 2:15 PM<br>
 
| Keynote - Kaj van de Loo, SVP Platforms &amp; On Demand, SAP and Yuecel Karabulut, PH.D., Chief Security Advisor 7 Head of Security Strategy, SAP Labs, LLC<br>
 
|-
 
| 2:15 PM - 3:00 PM<br>
 
| WebBlaze: New Techniques and Tools for Web Security - Dawn Song, Associate Professor, UC Berkeley<br>
 
|-
 
| 3:00 PM - 3:30 PM<br>
 
| Networking Break, refreshments<br>
 
|-
 
| 3:30 PM - 4:00 PM<br>
 
| State of the Art: Automated Black-Box Web app testing- Prof. John Mitchell, Stanford University and Jason Bau, PH.D. Student, Stanford <br>
 
|-
 
| 4:00 PM - 4:30 PM <br>
 
| Controlling Data in the Cloud: Outsourcing Computation without Outsourcing Control - Richard Chow, PARC<br>
 
|-
 
| 4.30 PM - 5.00 PM<br>
 
| TBD - Praveen Murthy, Fujitsu <br>
 
|-
 
| 5.00 PM - 6.00 PM<br>
 
| Panel - App Security issues - Cloud Security, Inertia with App Security, Future of App Security - Q&amp;A from the audience - Panelists: Prof Dawn Song; Richard Chow; Lars Ewe, CTO; Cenzic Moderator:&nbsp;Mandeep Khera <br>
 
|-
 
| 6.00 PM - 8.00 PM <br>
 
| Networking Reception - Dinner and Drinks! <br>
 
|}
 
  
<br>
+
OWASP chapter presentations must not be sales pitches and must adhere to a vendor neutral approach to the topic.
  
Detailed Abstracts and Speaker Bios
 
  
'''WebBlaze: New Techniques and Tools for Web Security''' I will present the WebBlaze project, aiming at designing and developing new techniques and tools to improve web security. WebBlaze's new technologies cover a broad range including new architectural solutions for defending against cross-site scripting attacks, tools for detecting and defending against cross-origin JavaScript capability leaks which lead to universal cross-site scripting attacks, and new approaches for secure browser extensions and web advertisements. In this talk, I will focus on two sample techniques in WebBlaze: (1) dynamic analysis and symbolic reasoning of JavaScript to detect client-side input validation vulnerabilities; (2) program binary analysis to extract security-related models from browsers to detect new classes of vulnerabilities such as content-sniffing vulnerabilities. Our techniques and tools have discovered previously unknown vulnerabilities in browsers and popular web applications. Some of the solutions in WebBlaze have been adopted by mainstream browsers and industry standards and deployed on millions of machines. '''<br>Bio – Prof. Dawn Song''' Dawn Song is an Associate Professor in the department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science at University of California, Berkeley. She obtained her B.S. in Physics from Tsinghua University in China in 1996, her M.S. in Computer Science from Carnegie Mellon University in 1999, and her Ph.D. in Computer Science from UC Berkeley in 2002. Prior to joining UC Berkeley, she was an Assistant Professor at Carnegie Mellon University from 2002 to 2007. Her research interest lies in security and privacy issues in computer systems and networks, including areas ranging from software security, networking security, database security, distributed systems security, to applied cryptography. She is the recipient of various awards including the NSF CAREER Award, the Alfred P. Sloan Research Fellowship Award, the IBM Faculty Award, the George Tallman Ladd Research Award, the Okawa Foundation Research Award, and the Li Ka Shing Foundation Women in Science Distinguished Lecture Series Award. She is also the author of multiple award papers in top security conferences, including the Best Paper Award at the USENIX Security Symposium and the Highest Ranked Paper Award at the IEEE Symposium on Security and Privacy. Recently she was awarded the MIT Technology Review TR-35 Award, recognizing her as one of the world's top innovators under the age of 35.
+
== Chapter Meetings ==
  
'''State of the Art: Automated Black-Box Web app testing'''
+
[http://www.meetup.com/Bay-Area-OWASP/ OWASP Bay Area Meetup] - All events can be found here
  
Black-box web application vulnerability scanners are automated tools that probe web applications for security vulnerabilities. In order to assess the current state of the art, we obtained access to eight leading tools and carried out a study of: (i) the class of vulnerabilities tested by these scanners, (ii) their effectiveness against target vulnerabilities, and (iii) the relevance of the target vulnerabilities to vulnerabilities found in the wild. To conduct our study we used a custom web application vulnerable to known and projected vulnerabilities, and previous versions of widely used web applications containing known vulnerabilities. Our results show the promise and effectiveness of automated tools, as a group, and also some limitations. In particular, “stored” forms of Cross Site Scripting (XSS) and SQL Injection (SQLI) vulnerabilities are not currently found by many tools. Because our goal is to assess the potential of future research, not to evaluate specific vendors, we will not report comparative data or make any recommendations about purchase of specific tools. <br>'''Bio – Prof. John Mitchell''' John Mitchell is the Mary and Gordon Crary Family Professor in the Stanford Computer Science Department. His research in computer security focuses on web security, network security, privacy, and distributed authorization management. He has also worked on programming language analysis and design, formal methods, and applications of mathematical logic to computer science. Prof. Mitchell currently leads research projects funded by the US Air Force, the Office of Naval Research, private companies and foundations, and he is the Stanford Principal Investigator of the multidisciplinary TRUST NSF Science and Technology Center. He is a consultant and advisor to a number of companies and is the author of over 140 research articles and two books.  
+
=== About Presentation Events ===
 +
Presentation events will feature 1 or more speakers discussing application security. These events will include a networking session, with drinks and food, before and after the event.
  
'''Controlling Data in the Cloud: Outsourcing Computation without Outsourcing Control''' Cloud computing is clearly one of today's most enticing technology areas. However, despite the surge in activity and interest, there are significant, persistent concerns about cloud computing that are impeding momentum and will eventually compromise the vision of cloud computing as a new IT procurement model. In this survey talk, we characterize the problems and their impact on adoption. In addition, we describe some existing research thrusts with the potential to alleviate some of the concerns impeding adoption. '''<br>Bio – Richard Chow''' Richard Chow works in the security and privacy group at the Palo Alto Research Center. Richard is interested in systems security, fraud detection, and privacy. Some of his achievements include architecting Yahoo!'s click-fraud protection system and the security and DRM components for Motorola's first Java-based phone platform. He has played a lead role at three startups and was also a founder of Trusted Systems Laboratories, which brought high-assurance security systems to the commercial market. Richard received his Ph.D. in Mathematics from UCLA.
+
=== About OWASP Social Hours===
 +
The purpose of the OWASP social gathering is:
  
== RSVP ==
+
* Informal security chat - the benefits of "hallway con" and security talk with others in the industry
 +
* Networking - meet other people in the field and industry
 +
* After work drinks - a nice break after a long work day
  
Please RSVP by registering at http://owaspbayarea-feb2010.eventbrite.com/  
+
Note: These events won't have any formal presentations. They're meant to be social gatherings to meet others in the industry and chat about security. Check our quarterly OWASP Bay Area schedule for the security presentation events.
 +
https://www.owasp.org/index.php/Bay_Area
 +
 +
Is your organization interested in hosting an OWASP social hour in the bay area (San Francisco, South Bay, East Bay)? Contact [email protected]
  
= Bay Area Past Events =
 
  
[[Bay Area Past Events]]
 
  
==== Bay Area OWASP Chapter Leaders  ====
+
==Past Events==
  
*[mailto:[email protected] Brian Bertacini]
+
=== '''2018 Past Events''' ===
*[http://garrettgee.com Garrett Gee]
 
*[mailto:[email protected] Mandeep Khera]
 
*[mailto:[email protected] Robi Papp]
 
  
__NOTOC__ <headertabs />
+
'''March 2018 - AppDynamics'''
  
 +
• 6:30 - Doors open
 +
 +
• 7:00-7:30 - HUNT: Data Driven Web Hacking & Manual Testing (JP Villanueva)
 +
 +
• 7:35-8:05 - Detecting suspicious activity: Time-based analysis of DNS traffic (Barak Raz)
 +
 +
• 8:05-9:00 - Networking
 +
 +
'''March 2018 - Intuit'''
 +
 +
• 6:30 - Doors open
 +
 +
• 7:00-7:30 New Attacks Against Unencrypted Traffic (Travis Hassloch)
 +
 +
• 7:35-8:05 - "Offensive Defense" - The best defense is a good offense (Stephan Chenette)
 +
 +
• 8:05-9:00 - Networking
 +
 +
'''*Special Event* - February 2018 - HackerOne'''
 +
 +
Hacker Thursday - Mobile Application Security
 +
 +
'''*Special Event* - January 2018 - CircleCI'''
 +
 +
Hacker Thursday - Application Security Automation with OWASP ZAP 2.7.0
 +
 +
'''January 2018 - Smyte'''
 +
 +
• 6:30 - Doors open
 +
 +
• 6:45 - 6:55 News Bites (Lina)
 +
 +
• 7:00-7:30 - Simple is Better: Fighting Online Abuse with Rate Limiter
 +
 +
• 7:35-8:05 - Reporter -> P.I. -> Security Engineer - How Curiosity Led to an InfoSec Career (Tad Whitaker)
 +
 +
• 8:10-8:40 - XXE Vulnerabilities: From the Beginning Till Now (Ivan Novikov)
 +
 +
• 8:40-9:00 - Networking
 +
 +
=== '''2017 Past Events''' ===
 +
 +
'''*Special Event* - December 2017 - Shape Security'''
 +
 +
Hacker Thursday - Unorthodox Security Assessment: OSINT for Intelligent Attacks
 +
 +
Nutan Kumar Panda
 +
 +
'''December 2017 - Contrast Security'''
 +
 +
• 6:30 - Doors open
 +
 +
• 6:45-7:00 - Welcome
 +
 +
• 7:00-8:00 - Three Ways of Security (Jeff Williams)
 +
 +
• 8:00-9:00 - Networking and Giveaways!
 +
 +
'''November 2017 - Credit Karma'''
 +
 +
• 6:30 - Doors open
 +
 +
• 6:45-7:00 - News with Hardeep Singh
 +
 +
• 7:00-7:30 - Three Keys for SecDevOps Success (Frank Kim)
 +
 +
• 7:35-8:05 - TLS for Microservices (Michael Cline)
 +
 +
• 8:05-9:00 - Networking
 +
 +
'''*Special Event* - November 2017 - Credit Karma'''
 +
 +
Hacker Thursdays: Learn secure coding with a live tournament
 +
 +
Stephen Allor
 +
 +
'''*Special Event* - October 2017 - ShieldX Networks'''
 +
 +
Hacker Thursdays:- Dissecting Injection vulnerabilities
 +
 +
Matt Torbin
 +
 +
'''September 2017 - Distil Networks'''
 +
 +
• 6:30 Doors Open
 +
 +
• 6:45 - 7:15 "The Great Bot Gift Card Heist" - Kevin Bottomley
 +
 +
• 7:20 - 7:50 "Scaling Application Security with DevSecOps" - Abhay Bhargav
 +
 +
• 7:55 - 8:25 "The Struts Vulnerability" - Prashant Venkatesh
 +
 +
• 8:25 - 9:00 Networking
 +
 +
• 9 Doors Close
 +
 +
'''September 2017 - Intuit'''
 +
 +
• 6:30 Doors Open
 +
 +
• 6:45 - 7:15 "Making Vulnerability Management Less Painful with OWASP DefectDojo" - Greg Anderson
 +
 +
• 7:20 - 7:50 "Crikey! Pirates Be Lurkin' at the Single Sign-On Watering Hole" - Mike Hunter
 +
 +
• 7:55 - 8:25 "There’s a new sheriff in town; dynamic security group recommendations with Grouper and Dredge" - Kevin Glisson
 +
 +
• 8:25 - 9:00 Networking
 +
 +
• 9 Doors Close
 +
 +
'''September 2017 - Lending Club'''
 +
 +
• 6:30 Doors Open
 +
 +
• 6:45 - 7:25 "Introducing the OWASP Game Security Framework" - Daniel Miessler
 +
 +
• 7:30 - 8:10 "Motherhood, Mental Health, and a Career in CyberSecurity" - Caroline Wong
 +
 +
• 8:10 - 9 Networking
 +
 +
• 9 Doors Close
 +
 +
'''*Special Event* - September 2017 - Lending Club'''
 +
 +
Web Application Penetration Basics
 +
 +
Ty Sbano
 +
 +
'''June 2017 - Lending Club'''
 +
 +
• 6:30 Doors Open
 +
 +
• 6:45 - 7:25 "Introducing the OWASP Game Security Framework" - Daniel Miessler
 +
 +
• 7:30 - 8:10 "Motherhood, Mental Health, and a Career in CyberSecurity" - Caroline Wong
 +
 +
• 8:10 - 9 Networking
 +
 +
• 9 Doors Close
 +
 +
'''May 2017 - Netflix (videos on youtube)'''
 +
 +
• 6:30 Doors Open
 +
 +
• 6:45 - 7:15 "All you email are belong to us: exploiting vulnerable email clients via domain name collision" - Ilya Nesterov and Maxim Goncharov
 +
 +
• 7:20 - 7:40 "Attacking & Defending DevOps" - Patrick Thomas
 +
 +
• 7:45 - 8:05 "LISA - Location Independent Security Approach" - Bryan Zimmer
 +
 +
• 8:05 - 9 Networking and Netflix OSS expo
 +
 +
• 9 Doors Close
 +
 +
'''April 2017 - Pandora (videos on youtube)'''
 +
 +
• 6:30 Doors Open
 +
 +
• 6:45 - 7:30 "Effective AppSec Metrics" - Caroline Wong
 +
 +
• 7:35 - 8:20 "IoT Exploitation 101" - Aditya Gupta
 +
 +
• 8:25 - 9:00 Networking
 +
 +
• 9:00 Doors Close
 +
 +
'''March 2017 (2) - Ebay'''
 +
 +
• 6:30 Doors Open
 +
 +
• 6:45 - 7:15 "Cracking Financial Systems" - John Menerick
 +
 +
• 7:20 - 7:50 "Hacking Mainframes" - Philip Young
 +
 +
• 7:55 - 8:25 "Hacking Smart Door Locks with Bluetooth Relay Attacks" - Mike Ryan
 +
 +
• 8:25 - 9 Networking
 +
 +
• 9 Doors Close
 +
 +
'''March 2017 - NetSpi'''
 +
 +
• 6:30 Doors Open
 +
 +
• 6:45 - 7:15 "Cracking Financial Systems" - John Menerick
 +
 +
• 7:20 - 7:50 "SQL Server Security" - Scott Sutherland
 +
 +
• 7:50 - 9 Networking
 +
 +
• 9 Doors Close
 +
 +
'''January 2017 (2) - Synack'''
 +
 +
• 6:30 Doors Open
 +
 +
• 6:45 - 7:30 Talk 1
 +
 +
Robert Wood - Bringing Red Teaming to the Board Room
 +
 +
• 7:45 - 8:30 Panel Discussions
 +
 +
• 8:30+ Networking
 +
 +
• 9 Doors Close
 +
 +
'''January 2017 - Bleacher Report'''
 +
 +
• 6:30 Doors Open
 +
 +
• 6:45 - 7:30 Talk 1
 +
 +
Robert Wood - Bringing Red Teaming to the Board Room
 +
 +
• 7:45 - 8:30 Talk 2
 +
 +
Rob Witoff - Security Automation With Immutable Infrastructure
 +
 +
• 8:30+ Networking
 +
 +
• 9 Doors Close
 +
 +
=== '''2016 Past Events''' ===
 +
'''November (2) 2016 - Linkedin'''
 +
 +
• 6:30 Doors Open
 +
 +
• 6:45 - 7:30 Talk 1 (Rohit Pitke, Mukul Khullar - A walkthrough on AWS Security Pitfalls)
 +
 +
• 7:45 - 8:30 Talk 2 (Scott Behrens - Cleaning Your Applications' Dirty Laundry With Scumblr )
 +
 +
• 8:30+ Networking
 +
 +
'''November 2016 - Salesforce'''
 +
 +
• 6:30 Doors Open
 +
 +
• 6:45 - 7:30 Talk 1 -Will Bengston and Travis McPeak - Jumpstart a Bandit Program in Your Organization
 +
 +
• 7:45 - 8:30 Talk 2 - Kuba Sendor (@jsendor), Yelp - "Slicing Apples with Ninja Sword: Fighting Malware at the Corporate Level"
 +
 +
'''September 2016 - Twitter'''
 +
 +
• 6:30 Doors Open
 +
 +
• 6:45 - 7:30 Talk 1 - Ron Hamilton, Performance Technology Partners (PTP)
 +
 +
• 7:45 - 8:30 Talk 2 - Luca Carettoni, LinkedIn Defending against Java Deserialization Vulnerabilities
 +
 +
'''June 2016 - Visa'''
 +
 +
6:30 - Doors Open
 +
 +
6:45 - Talk 1 - Secure by Default Stack: Web Application Security Infrastructure - Pritam Mungse, Visa
 +
 +
7:30 - Break
 +
 +
7:40 - Talk 2 - Research on HTTPS error storage policies, Adrienne Porter Felt, Google
 +
 +
8:30 - Networking
 +
 +
'''May 2016 - Thoughtworks'''
 +
 +
• 6:30 Doors Open
 +
 +
• 6:45-7:45 Chris Steipp,  Security Team - Wikimedia (How the Wikimedia Foundation promotes security in the open-source projects)
 +
 +
• 7:50 - 8:20 Michael Coates, TISO at Twitter & Kyle Randolph, Principal Security Engineer at Optimizely - Strategies for growing your AppSec team & influence
 +
 +
• 8:20+ Networking
 +
 +
'''April 2016 - Lending Club'''
 +
 +
6:30- Doors Open
 +
 +
6:40 - 7:15 - Joe Rozner, Richard Meester,  Prevoty - Sinking Your Hooks in Applications (from AppSecUSA 2015)
 +
 +
7:20 - 7:55 - Martin Vigo, Salesforce - Attacks on LastPass (from BlackHat 2015)
 +
 +
8:00 - 8:25 - Russell Sherman and Jonathan Carter, Lending Club –Adventures in Running Your Own CTF
 +
 +
'''February 2016 - RiskIQ'''
 +
 +
=== 2015 Past Events ===
 +
OWASP AppSecUSA was held in San Francisco in September, 2015 - the biggest OWASP conference to date!
 +
 +
Chapter meetings can be found on the [http://www.meetup.com/Bay-Area-OWASP/ meetup page]
 +
=== 2014 Past Events ===
 +
* December 2014 - San Francisco @ Mozilla
 +
** OWASP Chapter Meeting in San Francisco hosted by [https://mozilla.org Mozilla]<br>
 +
** Jasvir Nagra, Google - Firing Bots at Bugs
 +
** Sergey Shekyan & Bei Zhang, Shape Security - Headless Browsers Hide and Seek
 +
* August 2014 - San Francisco @ Lookout
 +
** OWASP Chapter Meeting in San Francisco hosted by [https://Lookout.com/ Lookout]<br>
 +
** Paul McMillan from Nebula [https://twitter.com/PaulM @PaulM] - Attacking the Internet of Things using Time
 +
** Ben Hagen from Netflix [https://twitter.com/enHagen @BenHagen] - Cloud Security at Scale and What it Means for Your Application
 +
*May 2014 - Redwood City @ Evernote
 +
** OWASP Chapter Meeting in Redwood City hosted by [https://Evernote.com/ Evernote]<br>
 +
** Arshad Noor - CTO, StrongAuth
 +
** Rich Tener - Director of Security, Evernote
 +
* March 2014 - San Francisco @ Stripe
 +
** OWASP Social Hour in San Francisco - Wednesday, Mar 12, 2014
 +
** Hosted by [https://stripe.com/ Stripe]<br>
 +
* Feb 2014 - San Jose @ Jillians
 +
** OWASP Developer Training & Social Hour - Monday 2/24/2013
 +
** Hosted by OWASP at Jillian's Billiards Club
 +
*Feb 2014 - Special Free Training Event
 +
** OWASP is hosting a special security boot camp for all RSA attendees and local developers. The training is recommended for developers who want to learn more about securing their code as well as security professionals who want to become acquainted with the latest web vulnerabilities. 
 +
** Presented by Jim Manico and Eoin Keary, this intensive boot camp focuses on the most common web application security problems, including aspects of both the OWASP Top Ten and the MITRE Top 25. The course will introduce and demonstrate application assessment techniques, illustrating how application vulnerabilities can be exploited so students really understand how to avoid introducing such vulnerabilities in their code and understand fixes. 
 +
*Jan 2014 - San Jose @ F5
 +
** OWASP Social Hour in San Jose - Wednesday 1/22/2013
 +
** Hosted by [http://www.f5.com/ F5]
 +
==== 2013 Past Events ====
 +
*Dec 2013 - San Francisco @ Twilio
 +
** OWASP Social Hour in San Francisco - Thursday 12/19/2013
 +
** Hosted by [http://www.twilio.com/ Twilio]
 +
*Nov 2013 - San Francisco @ LendingClub
 +
** OWASP Social Hour in Mountain View - Wednesday 11/6/13
 +
** Hosted by [https://www.lendingclub.com/ LendingClub]
 +
* Sept 2013 - Mt View @ Shape Security
 +
** OWASP Social Hour in Mountain View -  Wednesday 9/25/13
 +
** Hosted by [http://www.shapesecurity.com/ Shape Security]
 +
*July 2013 - Berkeley @ University of Berkely
 +
** OWASP Presentation Meeting
 +
** An Empirical Study of Vulnerability Rewards Programs, Devdatta Akhawe
 +
** "Putting Your Robots to Work", Twitter Security Team
 +
 +
==== Older Events ====
 +
[[Bay Area Past Events]]
 +
 +
== Bay Area Chapter Leaders ==
 +
 +
*Travis McPeak - Chapter Leader
 +
* William Bengtson
 +
* Brendan Higgins
 +
* Aaron Sutter
 +
* Christian DeHoyos
 +
* Prashant Venkatesh
 +
* Leif Dreizler
 +
* Tad Whitaker
 +
* Astha Singhal
 +
* Michael Coates
 +
 +
= Stay In Touch =
 +
* All events will be listed on this webpage
 +
* Keep in touch via twitter [https://twitter.com/OWASPBayArea @OWASPBayArea] or on [https://www.linkedin.com/groups/OWASP-BayArea-6568682 Linkedin]
 +
* [http://lists.owasp.org/mailman/listinfo/owasp-bayarea Bay Area Mailing List]
 +
 +
[[Category:OWASP Chapter]]
 +
[[Category:United States]]
 
[[Category:California]]
 
[[Category:California]]

Latest revision as of 18:23, 14 January 2019

Bay Area Chapter Board

Interested in finding out more? Will contact you with information on the first in person chapter board discussion in San Francisco

Submit your info here: https://goo.gl/forms/ScPCPrlDiQaUZ6cs2

Chapter Meetings

Bay Area OWASP Chapter meetings are posted on our meetup!

Please visit http://www.meetup.com/Bay-Area-OWASP/ for all chapter event information.

Our next event

We hold regular events across the OWASP Bay Area.

Check out our meetup page for upcoming events: More info on meetup.com


OWASP Bay Area

Welcome to the Bay Area chapter homepage.


Participation

OWASP Foundation (Overview Slides) is a professional association of global members and is open to anyone interested in learning more about software security. Local chapters are run independently and guided by the Chapter_Leader_Handbook. As a 501(c)(3) non-profit professional association your support and sponsorship of any meeting venue and/or refreshments is tax-deductible. Financial contributions should only be made online using the authorized online chapter donation button. To be a SPEAKER at ANY OWASP Chapter in the world simply review the speaker agreement and then contact the local chapter leader with details of what OWASP PROJECT, independent research or related software security topic you would like to present on.

Sponsorship/Membership

Btn donate SM.gif to this chapter or become a local chapter supporter.

Or consider the value of Individual, Corporate, or Academic Supporter membership. Ready to become a member? Join Now BlueIcon.JPG
Highres 469396345.jpg
OWASP Cali.jpg
March 2018.jpg

OWASP-Bay-Area-Aug-2014.png

Picture is @BenHagen talking about cloud security and applications

About OWASP Bay Area Chapter

Geographic Area of Bay Area Chapter

The 'Bay Area' is actually the San Francisco Bay Area in California, which is near other large towns that are across the bay from San Francisco such as Berkeley and Oakland, and south of San Francisco are San Mateo, Palo Alto, and the whole San Jose area. Currently, the Bay Area OWASP Chapter covers this whole geographic region.

Become a Presenter

Submit your talk now for an upcoming OWASP Bay Area Chapter Meeting

Link to submit

Notes about OWASP presentations

OWASP presentations are geared for a technical audience. We are particularly interested in new approaches to tackling application security problems, defensive techniques for new technology in the application security space and lessons learned from developers and security professionals tackling application security. Please consider a wide breadth of topic areas and we can discuss if they should be tailored in a particular direction for the OWASP audience.

OWASP chapter presentations must not be sales pitches and must adhere to a vendor neutral approach to the topic.


Chapter Meetings

OWASP Bay Area Meetup - All events can be found here

About Presentation Events

Presentation events will feature 1 or more speakers discussing application security. These events will include a networking session, with drinks and food, before and after the event.

About OWASP Social Hours

The purpose of the OWASP social gathering is:

  • Informal security chat - the benefits of "hallway con" and security talk with others in the industry
  • Networking - meet other people in the field and industry
  • After work drinks - a nice break after a long work day

Note: These events won't have any formal presentations. They're meant to be social gatherings to meet others in the industry and chat about security. Check our quarterly OWASP Bay Area schedule for the security presentation events. https://www.owasp.org/index.php/Bay_Area

Is your organization interested in hosting an OWASP social hour in the bay area (San Francisco, South Bay, East Bay)? Contact [email protected]


Past Events

2018 Past Events

March 2018 - AppDynamics

• 6:30 - Doors open

• 7:00-7:30 - HUNT: Data Driven Web Hacking & Manual Testing (JP Villanueva)

• 7:35-8:05 - Detecting suspicious activity: Time-based analysis of DNS traffic (Barak Raz)

• 8:05-9:00 - Networking

March 2018 - Intuit

• 6:30 - Doors open

• 7:00-7:30 New Attacks Against Unencrypted Traffic (Travis Hassloch)

• 7:35-8:05 - "Offensive Defense" - The best defense is a good offense (Stephan Chenette)

• 8:05-9:00 - Networking

*Special Event* - February 2018 - HackerOne

Hacker Thursday - Mobile Application Security

*Special Event* - January 2018 - CircleCI

Hacker Thursday - Application Security Automation with OWASP ZAP 2.7.0

January 2018 - Smyte

• 6:30 - Doors open

• 6:45 - 6:55 News Bites (Lina)

• 7:00-7:30 - Simple is Better: Fighting Online Abuse with Rate Limiter

• 7:35-8:05 - Reporter -> P.I. -> Security Engineer - How Curiosity Led to an InfoSec Career (Tad Whitaker)

• 8:10-8:40 - XXE Vulnerabilities: From the Beginning Till Now (Ivan Novikov)

• 8:40-9:00 - Networking

2017 Past Events

*Special Event* - December 2017 - Shape Security

Hacker Thursday - Unorthodox Security Assessment: OSINT for Intelligent Attacks

Nutan Kumar Panda

December 2017 - Contrast Security

• 6:30 - Doors open

• 6:45-7:00 - Welcome

• 7:00-8:00 - Three Ways of Security (Jeff Williams)

• 8:00-9:00 - Networking and Giveaways!

November 2017 - Credit Karma

• 6:30 - Doors open

• 6:45-7:00 - News with Hardeep Singh

• 7:00-7:30 - Three Keys for SecDevOps Success (Frank Kim)

• 7:35-8:05 - TLS for Microservices (Michael Cline)

• 8:05-9:00 - Networking

*Special Event* - November 2017 - Credit Karma

Hacker Thursdays: Learn secure coding with a live tournament

Stephen Allor

*Special Event* - October 2017 - ShieldX Networks

Hacker Thursdays:- Dissecting Injection vulnerabilities

Matt Torbin

September 2017 - Distil Networks

• 6:30 Doors Open

• 6:45 - 7:15 "The Great Bot Gift Card Heist" - Kevin Bottomley

• 7:20 - 7:50 "Scaling Application Security with DevSecOps" - Abhay Bhargav

• 7:55 - 8:25 "The Struts Vulnerability" - Prashant Venkatesh

• 8:25 - 9:00 Networking

• 9 Doors Close

September 2017 - Intuit

• 6:30 Doors Open

• 6:45 - 7:15 "Making Vulnerability Management Less Painful with OWASP DefectDojo" - Greg Anderson

• 7:20 - 7:50 "Crikey! Pirates Be Lurkin' at the Single Sign-On Watering Hole" - Mike Hunter

• 7:55 - 8:25 "There’s a new sheriff in town; dynamic security group recommendations with Grouper and Dredge" - Kevin Glisson

• 8:25 - 9:00 Networking

• 9 Doors Close

September 2017 - Lending Club

• 6:30 Doors Open

• 6:45 - 7:25 "Introducing the OWASP Game Security Framework" - Daniel Miessler

• 7:30 - 8:10 "Motherhood, Mental Health, and a Career in CyberSecurity" - Caroline Wong

• 8:10 - 9 Networking

• 9 Doors Close

*Special Event* - September 2017 - Lending Club

Web Application Penetration Basics

Ty Sbano

June 2017 - Lending Club

• 6:30 Doors Open

• 6:45 - 7:25 "Introducing the OWASP Game Security Framework" - Daniel Miessler

• 7:30 - 8:10 "Motherhood, Mental Health, and a Career in CyberSecurity" - Caroline Wong

• 8:10 - 9 Networking

• 9 Doors Close

May 2017 - Netflix (videos on youtube)

• 6:30 Doors Open

• 6:45 - 7:15 "All you email are belong to us: exploiting vulnerable email clients via domain name collision" - Ilya Nesterov and Maxim Goncharov

• 7:20 - 7:40 "Attacking & Defending DevOps" - Patrick Thomas

• 7:45 - 8:05 "LISA - Location Independent Security Approach" - Bryan Zimmer

• 8:05 - 9 Networking and Netflix OSS expo

• 9 Doors Close

April 2017 - Pandora (videos on youtube)

• 6:30 Doors Open

• 6:45 - 7:30 "Effective AppSec Metrics" - Caroline Wong

• 7:35 - 8:20 "IoT Exploitation 101" - Aditya Gupta

• 8:25 - 9:00 Networking

• 9:00 Doors Close

March 2017 (2) - Ebay

• 6:30 Doors Open

• 6:45 - 7:15 "Cracking Financial Systems" - John Menerick

• 7:20 - 7:50 "Hacking Mainframes" - Philip Young

• 7:55 - 8:25 "Hacking Smart Door Locks with Bluetooth Relay Attacks" - Mike Ryan

• 8:25 - 9 Networking

• 9 Doors Close

March 2017 - NetSpi

• 6:30 Doors Open

• 6:45 - 7:15 "Cracking Financial Systems" - John Menerick

• 7:20 - 7:50 "SQL Server Security" - Scott Sutherland

• 7:50 - 9 Networking

• 9 Doors Close

January 2017 (2) - Synack

• 6:30 Doors Open

• 6:45 - 7:30 Talk 1

Robert Wood - Bringing Red Teaming to the Board Room

• 7:45 - 8:30 Panel Discussions

• 8:30+ Networking

• 9 Doors Close

January 2017 - Bleacher Report

• 6:30 Doors Open

• 6:45 - 7:30 Talk 1

Robert Wood - Bringing Red Teaming to the Board Room

• 7:45 - 8:30 Talk 2

Rob Witoff - Security Automation With Immutable Infrastructure

• 8:30+ Networking

• 9 Doors Close

2016 Past Events

November (2) 2016 - Linkedin

• 6:30 Doors Open

• 6:45 - 7:30 Talk 1 (Rohit Pitke, Mukul Khullar - A walkthrough on AWS Security Pitfalls)

• 7:45 - 8:30 Talk 2 (Scott Behrens - Cleaning Your Applications' Dirty Laundry With Scumblr )

• 8:30+ Networking

November 2016 - Salesforce

• 6:30 Doors Open

• 6:45 - 7:30 Talk 1 -Will Bengston and Travis McPeak - Jumpstart a Bandit Program in Your Organization

• 7:45 - 8:30 Talk 2 - Kuba Sendor (@jsendor), Yelp - "Slicing Apples with Ninja Sword: Fighting Malware at the Corporate Level"

September 2016 - Twitter

• 6:30 Doors Open

• 6:45 - 7:30 Talk 1 - Ron Hamilton, Performance Technology Partners (PTP)

• 7:45 - 8:30 Talk 2 - Luca Carettoni, LinkedIn Defending against Java Deserialization Vulnerabilities

June 2016 - Visa

6:30 - Doors Open

6:45 - Talk 1 - Secure by Default Stack: Web Application Security Infrastructure - Pritam Mungse, Visa

7:30 - Break

7:40 - Talk 2 - Research on HTTPS error storage policies, Adrienne Porter Felt, Google

8:30 - Networking

May 2016 - Thoughtworks

• 6:30 Doors Open

• 6:45-7:45 Chris Steipp,  Security Team - Wikimedia (How the Wikimedia Foundation promotes security in the open-source projects)

• 7:50 - 8:20 Michael Coates, TISO at Twitter & Kyle Randolph, Principal Security Engineer at Optimizely - Strategies for growing your AppSec team & influence

• 8:20+ Networking

April 2016 - Lending Club

6:30- Doors Open

6:40 - 7:15 - Joe Rozner, Richard Meester,  Prevoty - Sinking Your Hooks in Applications (from AppSecUSA 2015)

7:20 - 7:55 - Martin Vigo, Salesforce - Attacks on LastPass (from BlackHat 2015)

8:00 - 8:25 - Russell Sherman and Jonathan Carter, Lending Club –Adventures in Running Your Own CTF

February 2016 - RiskIQ

2015 Past Events

OWASP AppSecUSA was held in San Francisco in September, 2015 - the biggest OWASP conference to date!

Chapter meetings can be found on the meetup page

2014 Past Events

  • December 2014 - San Francisco @ Mozilla
    • OWASP Chapter Meeting in San Francisco hosted by Mozilla
    • Jasvir Nagra, Google - Firing Bots at Bugs
    • Sergey Shekyan & Bei Zhang, Shape Security - Headless Browsers Hide and Seek
  • August 2014 - San Francisco @ Lookout
    • OWASP Chapter Meeting in San Francisco hosted by Lookout
    • Paul McMillan from Nebula @PaulM - Attacking the Internet of Things using Time
    • Ben Hagen from Netflix @BenHagen - Cloud Security at Scale and What it Means for Your Application
  • May 2014 - Redwood City @ Evernote
    • OWASP Chapter Meeting in Redwood City hosted by Evernote
    • Arshad Noor - CTO, StrongAuth
    • Rich Tener - Director of Security, Evernote
  • March 2014 - San Francisco @ Stripe
    • OWASP Social Hour in San Francisco - Wednesday, Mar 12, 2014
    • Hosted by Stripe
  • Feb 2014 - San Jose @ Jillians
    • OWASP Developer Training & Social Hour - Monday 2/24/2013
    • Hosted by OWASP at Jillian's Billiards Club
  • Feb 2014 - Special Free Training Event
    • OWASP is hosting a special security boot camp for all RSA attendees and local developers. The training is recommended for developers who want to learn more about securing their code as well as security professionals who want to become acquainted with the latest web vulnerabilities.
    • Presented by Jim Manico and Eoin Keary, this intensive boot camp focuses on the most common web application security problems, including aspects of both the OWASP Top Ten and the MITRE Top 25. The course will introduce and demonstrate application assessment techniques, illustrating how application vulnerabilities can be exploited so students really understand how to avoid introducing such vulnerabilities in their code and understand fixes.
  • Jan 2014 - San Jose @ F5
    • OWASP Social Hour in San Jose - Wednesday 1/22/2013
    • Hosted by F5

2013 Past Events

  • Dec 2013 - San Francisco @ Twilio
    • OWASP Social Hour in San Francisco - Thursday 12/19/2013
    • Hosted by Twilio
  • Nov 2013 - San Francisco @ LendingClub
    • OWASP Social Hour in Mountain View - Wednesday 11/6/13
    • Hosted by LendingClub
  • Sept 2013 - Mt View @ Shape Security
    • OWASP Social Hour in Mountain View - Wednesday 9/25/13
    • Hosted by Shape Security
  • July 2013 - Berkeley @ University of Berkely
    • OWASP Presentation Meeting
    • An Empirical Study of Vulnerability Rewards Programs, Devdatta Akhawe
    • "Putting Your Robots to Work", Twitter Security Team

Older Events

Bay Area Past Events

Bay Area Chapter Leaders

  • Travis McPeak - Chapter Leader
  • William Bengtson
  • Brendan Higgins
  • Aaron Sutter
  • Christian DeHoyos
  • Prashant Venkatesh
  • Leif Dreizler
  • Tad Whitaker
  • Astha Singhal
  • Michael Coates

Stay In Touch