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==== Local News ==== | ==== Local News ==== | ||
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+ | === OWASP College Chapters === | ||
+ | Interested in starting you own college chapter? <br> | ||
+ | Have a look at: http://www.owasp.org/index.php/OWASP_College_Chapters_Program | ||
+ | ---- | ||
=== OWASP BeNeLux Day 2010 is comming up === | === OWASP BeNeLux Day 2010 is comming up === | ||
The OWASP BeNeLux Day 2010 will take place 1st and 2nd of December at the Fontys Hogeschool, Eindhoven! <br> | The OWASP BeNeLux Day 2010 will take place 1st and 2nd of December at the Fontys Hogeschool, Eindhoven! <br> | ||
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See:http://www.owasp.org/index.php/BeNeLux_OWASP_Day_2010 | See:http://www.owasp.org/index.php/BeNeLux_OWASP_Day_2010 | ||
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=== Chapter Meeting September 23rd 2010 === | === Chapter Meeting September 23rd 2010 === | ||
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'''Meeting details''' Location: Weena 505, Rotterdam, The Netherlands Time: 19:00 - 21:00 Registration: send an email to netherlands (at) owasp (dot) org | '''Meeting details''' Location: Weena 505, Rotterdam, The Netherlands Time: 19:00 - 21:00 Registration: send an email to netherlands (at) owasp (dot) org | ||
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==== Chapter Meetings ==== | ==== Chapter Meetings ==== | ||
Revision as of 14:05, 7 October 2010
OWASP Netherlands
Welcome to the Netherlands 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
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?
Local News
OWASP College Chapters
Interested in starting you own college chapter?
Have a look at: http://www.owasp.org/index.php/OWASP_College_Chapters_Program
OWASP BeNeLux Day 2010 is comming up
The OWASP BeNeLux Day 2010 will take place 1st and 2nd of December at the Fontys Hogeschool, Eindhoven!
Mark the date in you agenda!
- December 1st: OWASP Training Day
- December 2nd: OWASP Conference
See:http://www.owasp.org/index.php/BeNeLux_OWASP_Day_2010
Chapter Meeting September 23rd 2010
Want to find out how Samy met your girlfriend? Come to our next chaptermeeting on the 23rd of september in Rotterdam, The Netherlands!
How I Met Your Girlfriend: The discovery and execution of entirely new classes of Web attacks in order to meet your girlfriend.
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), extracting extremely accurate geolocation information from a Web browser (not using IP geolocation), and more.
Speaker 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 co-founder of Fonality, Inc., an IP PBX company, Samy previously led the development of 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.
Meeting details Location: Weena 505, Rotterdam, The Netherlands Time: 19:00 - 21:00 Registration: send an email to netherlands (at) owasp (dot) org
Chapter Meetings
2010 Schedule
- March 11th, 18.00 - 21.30 Topic: Database Security
- May 20th, 18.00 - 21.30 Topic: Web Application Firewalls
- June 30th, 18:00 - 21:00 Workshop Google Hacks & Skipfish
- September 23rd, 18.00 - 21.30 Topic: How Samy met your girlfriend
- December 1st & 2nd, OWASP BeNeLux conference
REGISTRATION
To register for a chapter meeting (first register, first serve)! Please send an email to: netherlands 'at' owasp.org.
How Samy met your girlfriend
WHERE
Nationale- Nederlanden |
Speaker and Sandwiches sponsored by OWASP Drinks sponsored by Sogeti |
PROGRAM
19:00 - 19:20 Check-In (catering included)
19:20 - 19:30 Opening (OWASP Netherlands Chapter)
19:30 - 20:30 Presentation: How Samy met your girlfriend by Samy Kamkar
20:30 - 21:00 Discussion
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 co-founder of Fonality, Inc., an IP PBX company, Samy previously led the development of 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.
How Samy met your girlfriend
How I Met Your Girlfriend: The discovery and execution of entirely new classes of Web attacks in order to meet your girlfriend.
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), extracting extremely accurate geolocation information from a Web browser (not using IP geolocation), and more.
Links
Workshop Google Hacks & Skipfish (June 30th 2010)
WHERE
Sogeti Nederland B.V |
|
|
|
PROGRAM
18:00 - 18:30 Check-In (catering included)
18:30 - 18:45 Opening (OWASP organization, projects, sponsor)
18:45 - 19:00 Break
19:00 - 21:00 Workshop Google Hacking & Skipfish
21:00 - 21:30 Discussion, questions and social networking
Bios
Christian Heinrich is the Project Leader of the OWASP "Google Hacking" Project i.e. "Download Indexed Cache" and has contributed to the "Spiders/Robots/Crawlers" and "Search Engine Reconnaissance" sections of the OWASP Testing Guide v3 and more recently to the development of the OWASP Top Ten and Application Security Verification Standard (ASVS) OWASP Projects. He has presented at OWASP Conferences in USA, Australia and Europe and OWASP Chapters in London, UK and Sydney and Melbourne, Australia.
Google Hacking:
Google Hacks is a compilation of carefully crafted Google searches that expose novel functionality from Google's search and map services. For example, you can use it to view a timeline of your search results, view a map, search for music, search for books, and perform many other specific kinds of searches. You can also use this program to use google as a proxy.
Skipfish:
A fully automated, active web application security reconnaissance tool. Key features: High speed: pure C code, highly optimized HTTP handling, minimal CPU footprint - easily achieving 2000 requests per second with responsive targets. Ease of use: heuristics to support a variety of quirky web frameworks and mixed-technology sites, with automatic learning capabilities, on-the-fly wordlist creation, and form autocompletion. Cutting-edge security logic: high quality, low false positive, differential security checks, capable of spotting a range of subtle flaws, including blind injection vectors.
The relevant links:
- http://www.owasp.org/index.php/Category:OWASP_Google_Hacking_Project
- http://www.owasp.org/index.php/Testing:_Search_engine_discovery/reconnaissance_%28OWASP-IG-002%29
- http://www.owasp.org/index.php/Testing:_Spiders,_Robots,_and_Crawlers_%28OWASP-IG-001%29
Web Application Firewalls (May 20th 2010)
WHEN
May 2010 (18h00pm-21h30pm).
WHERE
Location: http://www.setuputrecht.nl/ |
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|
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PROGRAM
18:00 - 18:30 Check-In (catering included)
18:30 - 18:45 Introduction (OWASP organization, projects, sponsor)
18.45 - 19.45 Web Application Firewalls in dynamic environments(by Alexander Meisel)
Alexander Meisel is the CTO of 'art of defence' (AOD), a German based software vendor. The company specializes in high performance deployments of Web Application Firewalls in very dynamic environments all over the world.
Abstract:
The current trend towards cloud computing forces everybody to deploy services in a virtual environment. In current dedicated environments WAFs or Web Application Firewalls are mostly deployed as a hardware (black) box which is easy at first but limits them to only low performance web cluster architectures. Moving those systems virtualized into a cloud environment makes almost no sense because of the resource limitations.
The is solution is a redesign which enables WAFs to be part of a true message based cloud system. This talk explains how truly virtualized and distributed web applications are architected, work and scale in high performance environments.
19.45 – 20.00 Break
20.00 - 21:00 Bypassing Web Application Firewalls (by Sandro Gauci)
Sandro Gauci is the owner and Founder of EnableSecurity (www.enablesecurity.com) where he performs R&D and security consultancy for mid-sized companies. Sandro has over 9 years experience in the security industry and is focused on analysis of security challenges and providing solutions to such threats. Hispassion is vulnerability research and has previously worked together with various endors such as Microsoft and Sun to fix security holes. Sandro is the author of the free VoIP security scanning suite SIPVicious (sipvicious.org) and VOIPPACK for CANVAS.
Abstract:
WAFs or Web Application Firewalls are being deployed to fix security issues in your web applications. The question is, are they?
In this presentation we take a look at some of the issues related to making use of this solution and how it may affect the overall security posture of your web application. Finally we will describe tools to automate detection of WAFs, and also tools to help identify ways to bypass WAFs. This presentation will include updates to the open source WAF security testing tools - WAFFIT.
(the slides in pdf format)
21.00 – 21:30 Discussion, questions and social networking
The Announcement of this meeting: Media:Announcement_OWASP-NL_May_20th_2010.pdf
Database Security (Mar-11-2010)
WHEN
Thurday, March 11th, 2010 (18h00pm-21h30pm).
WHERE
ASR Nederland |
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|
|
PROGRAM
18:00 - 18:30 Check-In (catering included)
18:30 - 18:45 Introduction (OWASP organization, projects, sponsor)
18.45 - 19.45 SQL Injection - How far does the rabbit hole go? (By Justin Clarke)
Justin Clarke is a co-founder and Director at Gotham Digital Science, based in the United Kingdom. He has over twelve years of experience in assessing the security of networks, web applications, and wireless networks for large financial, retail, technology and government clients in the United States, the United Kingdom and New Zealand.
Justin is the the technical editor and lead author of “SQL Injection Attacks and Defense” (Syngress 2009), co-author of "Network Security Tools: Writing, Hacking, and Modifying Security Tools" (O’Reilly 2005), a contributing author to "Network Security Assessment: Know Your Network, 2nd Edition" (O’Reilly 2007), as well as a speaker at a number of conferences and events on security topics, including Black Hat USA, EuSecWest, OSCON, ISACA, RSA, SANS, OWASP, and the British Computer Society. He is the author of the open source SQLBrute blind SQL injection testing tool, and is the Chapter Leader for the London chapter of OWASP.
SQl Injection - How far does the rabbit hole go? SQL Injection has been around for over 10 years, and yet it is still to this day not truly understood by many security professionals and developers. With the recent mass attacks against sites across the world it has again come to the fore of vulnerabilities under the spotlight, however many consider it to only be a data access issue, or parameterized queries to be a panacea.
This talk starts from what was demonstrated last year at Black Hat in Las Vegas, where a self propagating SQL Injection worm was demonstrated live on stage. Explore some of the deeper, darker areas of SQL Injection, hybrid attacks, and exploiting obscure database functionality
(the slides in pdf format)
19.45 – 20.00 Break
20. 00 – 20.30 VAC Insecure Direct Object Reference (By Marinus Kuivenhoven)
Marinus Kuivenhoven is a Senior Technology Specialist with Sogeti Nederland B.V. specializing in service oriented architectures and secure application development. His experience include developing and administrating Oracle-based systems. At Sogeti Nederland B.V. he is also an active member of the PaSS -Software(Proactive Security Strategy) taskforce focusing on secure application development. Marinus also developed and teaches several application security courses both within and outside Sogeti. In the past years he has written for magazine such as Computable and We Love IT. And he has spoken on a number of conferences and events like OWASP, Recent OO Trends, Open Source Developer Conference and Engineering World.
Vulnerability: Insecure Direct Object Reference is when a web application exposes an internal implementation object to the user. Some examples of internal implementation objects are database records, URLs, or files.
Attack: An attacker can modify the internal implementation object in an attempt to abuse the access controls on this object. When the attacker does this they may have the ability to access functionality that the developer didn’t intend to expose access to.
Countermeasure: Reference should be validated for authorization and accessed through reference maps. How this should be done will be shown.
(the slides in pdf format)
20.30 – 21.15 Overlooked Resources and Practices (By Justin Clarke)
In his second presentation, Justin Clarke discussed OWASP resources and best practices by highlighting some OWASP projects and underused security practices. He shared his experiences in his daily work as well as the known pitfalls.
(the slides in pdf format)
21.15 – 21:30 Discussion, questions and social networking
The Announcement of this meeting: Media:Announcement_OWASP-NL_March_11th_2010.pdf
The flyer of this meeting: Media:Owasp_NL_march2010.pdf
Past Events
Call for Speakers
We are continuously looking for speakers.
Presentations: Are you working on an interesting subject, would you like to share your experience with the OWASP community and do you have presentation skills. Please let us know! Any topic related to web application security will be appreciated!
VAC, Vulnerability, Attack, Countermeasure: The VAC is a re occuring part of the chapter meetings. The VAC is a half hour in-depth technical presentation about a vulnerability, how it can be exploited and how to prevent it!
Links:
Interested in presenting at a local chapter meeting, please send an email to: netherlands 'at' owasp.org
Call for Location
For the OWASP Netherlands chapter meetings to come, we are continuously looking for locations!
Most preferable, the location is good accessible with public transport and by car. Free parking should be provided.
What do we expect:
- meeting room for at least 50 people
- lunch for attendees
- drinks, sandwiches...
- a small present for the speakers
- (e.g. bottle of wine, for speakers from aboard alcohol might be less practical if flying in only with hand luggage)
Interested in sponsoring a local chapter meeting, please send an email to: netherlands 'at' owasp.org
Chapter Leaders
The Netherlands Chapter is supported by the following board:
- Bert Koelewijn, ASR
- Ferdinand Vroom, Nationale Nederlanden
- Martin Knobloch, Sogeti
- Peter Gouwentak, ING
- OWASP Netherlands, OWASP Netherlands board email adres
Our goal is to professionalize the local OWASP functioning, provide in a bigger footprint to detect OWASP opportunities such as speakers/topics/sponsors/… and set a 5 year target on: Target audiences, Different events and Interactions of OWASP global – local projects.
Chapter Sponsoring
OWASP Netherlands is looking for organizations to sponsor our chapter. If you are interested in sponsoring the Netherlands chapter please contact via email: netherlands 'at' owasp.org.
If you would like to donate to our chapter, please use the PayPal link below. Thank you!
<paypal>Netherlands</paypal>