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Belgium Events 2016

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These are the 2016 events of the OWASP Belgium Chapter.

Previous year: 2015. Next year: 2017.

Previous Meeting (18 October 2016) in Ghent

WHEN

Tuesday 18 October 2016

WHERE

Hosted at UGent

Faculteit Ingenieurswetenschappen en Architectuur
Campus Boekentoren
Jozef Plateaustraat 22
9000 Gent
Belgium

PROGRAM

The agenda:

Abstract: Today, companies do not have a shortage of known security problems in their solutions. Tools and people point out numerous software security problems that eventually should be fixed. So how do organizations deal with all these issues? What is the most effective way to get issues fixed? For companies taking security serious, the question is no longer “How many problems can you find?”, but the real question is “How many security issues can you fix or prevent developers from making?” In this session, we explore different routes on how to find and fix security issues, or prevent making them in the first place.
Bio: Matias is the founder of Sensei Security, a software security startup building solutions to effectively fix and prevent security problems in software. Matias has over a decade of hands-on software security experience ranging from the research to improve existing solutions to scoping and building new solutions. A dozen patents and a bunch of papers are the result of his research that eventually led to a hand full of commercial products.
Abstract: Software we rely on every day is riddled with security vulnerabilities that can be exploited to crash, extract data, or seize control of computer systems. Current exploit mitigations do not seem to suffice to remedy this situation because hackers can circumvent them with relative ease. In this talk, I will present GHUMVEE, a state-of-the-art Multi-Variant Execution framework that was developed at Ghent University. GHUMVEE can amplify the effectiveness of other exploit mitigations and enable them to detect and block zero-day attacks. The idea is to create multiple diversified replicas of a vulnerable program and to execute these replicas in parallel on the same inputs while simultaneously monitoring their behavior. The program replicas are functionally equivalent under normal circumstances but behave differently when attacked. GHUMVEE detects this behavioral difference using a monitor. In the talk, I will discuss GHUMVEE’s design and implementation, as well as some of the follow-up research sponsored by the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) in the USA.
Bio: Stijn is a Postdoctoral Scholar in Prof. Michael Franz’ research group at the University of California, Irvine. He received his Ph.D. from Ghent University in 2015, under the supervision of Prof. Bjorn De Sutter and Prof. Koen De Bosschere. His research interests include systems security, reliability, and compilation. He is the recipient of the 2016 IBM Innovation Award (awarded by the F.W.O) for his PhD thesis on the topic of Multi-Variant Execution.
Abstract: ASPIRE is a three year European FP7 research project on software protection to mitigate Man-at-the-End attacks on native code libraries on mobile systems. Together with Nagravision, Gemalto, and SafeNet, world leaders in their respective security markets, four academic institutes aim for developing layered, but software-only protection techniques that can protect the assets embedded in mobile apps of content, software and service providers as well as can be achieved with custom hardware-based protections such as smart cards and dongles. The project also aims for developing a quantitative evaluation methodology to assess the value of combinations of protections, and decision support to aid users of the ASPIRE protection framework. ASPIRE ends in October 2016, so this talk will present a preview off the final project results.
Bio: Since 2008, Bjorn is a professor in the Computer Systems Lab at Ghent University. His research topics include compiler technologies and software protection, incl. binary rewriting techniques for a wide range of applications such as fault-injection mitigation, side-channel leakage mitigation, anti-reverse engineer, anti-tampering, and anti-debugging. He coordinates the ASPIRE project.
  • 21h15 - ...: drink and networking event

REGISTRATION

Please register via EventBrite: https://owasp-belgium-2016-10-18.eventbrite.com

Coverage

Previous Meeting (8 September 2016) in Zaventem

WHEN

Thursday 8 September 2016

WHERE

Hosted at PwC

Woluwedal 18
1932 Zaventem
Belgium

Google Maps: https://goo.gl/maps/3Jo8u

PROGRAM

UPDATED AGENDA:

The agenda:

Abstract: Many website owners turn to Cloud-based Security Providers (CBSPs) to protect their websites from DDoS and web application attacks. Some of these security services rely solely on changing the DNS settings of a customer’s domain name to reroute his traffic through the CBSP's cloud infrastructure. This allows for complete circumvention of the security service by directly attacking the website’s hosting IP address. Therefore, it is crucial that a web server's hosting IP address remains hidden from potential attackers. Despite this risk, our study has shown that, in practice, over 70% of CBSP-protected domains are exposing their real IP address. In this talk, we will discuss several significant attack vectors and steps administrators can take to prevent their IP address from being discovered by attackers.
Bio: Thomas Vissers Thomas Vissers is a PhD Researcher at iMinds-Distrinet, KU Leuven. His research is broadly focused on internet security and privacy topics, such as cloud-based security, domain name abuse, denial-of-service attacks, email security and browser fingerprinting. Furthermore, he has a special interest in machine learning, data mining and large-scale analyses. Thomas has published and presented his research at various international conferences, such as CCS, NDSS and HotPETS. He obtained his Master’s degree in Engineering from the University of Antwerp and was a research intern at Anna University, India.
Abstract: In the ever changing security landscape we are slowly seeing a shift from labeling hackers per default as 'bad and malicious individuals', to accepting them slowly as 'useful and potentially friendly’. We see more and more compagnies starting a bug bounty program and/or a Responsible Disclosure (Coordinated vulnerability disclosure) program.
We in te Netherlands are (at least in Europe) leading the pack on this last subject, also backed heavily by the Dutch NCSC, the Dutch government and the Dutch prosecution services with their Responsible Disclosure guideline .
In this interactive and mostly humorous talk I’ll start with defining security (in a grotesk way), followed bij the definition of hackers, the way hackers think and work, and how they can be used instead of feared by compagnies. I’ll show how bug bounties and the Responsible Disclosure processes work, or how they sometimes do not. I will also take the audience with me on some examples on how and why some websites fail in being secure, and the development errors behind those fails.
During the talk I interact a lot with the audience, do quiz questions about the subject, and reward good answers with a bottle of club-mate. At the end of the talk the combined audience consensus should of course be to hug the hackers!
Bio: Edwin van Andel , better known as @Yafsec, joined Zerocopter, where he's mostly working on publicly expanding their “continuous security” platform. Elected winner of the Lightning talks at BruCON 2013, and organizer of the alternative NCSC conference "because no hackers were invited" #ALT-S, he is now a renown speaker that will introduce you -in a humorous way- to the dangers, virtues and current state of affairs in the security landscape.

REGISTRATION

Please register via EventBrite: https://owasp-belgium-2016-09-08.eventbrite.com

Coverage

Previous Meeting (23 May 2016) in Mechelen

WHEN

Monday 23 May 2016

WHERE

Hosted at Moonbeat (Mechelen), kindly offered by is4u.

Venue address:
Moonbeat
Oude Brusselsestraat 10-12
2800 mechelen

Route/Parking: http://www.moonbeat.be/contact .

PROGRAM

The agenda:

  • 18h00 - 19h00: Welcome & sandwiches
  • 19h00 - 19h10: OWASP Update
  • 19h10 - 20h00: All Your Biases Belong to Us: Breaking RC4 in WPA-TKIP and TLS (by Mathy Vanhoef, iMinds-DistriNet-KU Leuven)
Abstract: We present new biases in RC4, break the Wi-Fi Protected Access Temporal Key Integrity Protocol (WPA-TKIP), and design a practical plaintext recovery attack against the Transport Layer Security (TLS) protocol. To empirically find new biases in the RC4 keystream we use statistical hypothesis tests. This reveals many new biases in the initial keystream bytes, as well as several new long-term biases. Our fixed-plaintext recovery algorithms are capable of using multiple types of biases, and return a list of plaintext candidates in decreasing likelihood.
To break WPA-TKIP we introduce a method to generate a large number of identical packets. This packet is decrypted by generating its plaintext candidate list, and using redundant packet structure to prune bad candidates. From the decrypted packet we derive the TKIP MIC key, which can be used to inject and decrypt packets. In practice the attack can be executed within an hour. We also attack TLS as used by HTTPS, where we show how to decrypt a secure cookie with a high success rate using roughly one billion ciphertexts. This is done by injecting known data around the cookie, abusing this using Mantin's ABSAB bias, and brute-forcing the cookie by traversing the plaintext candidates. Using our traffic generation technique, we are able to execute the attack in merely 75 hours.
Bio: Mathy Vanhoef is a PhD student at KU Leuven, where he performs research on RC4 and its usage in network protocols such as WPA-TKIP and SSL/TLS (e.g. he discovered the RC4 NOMORE attack). He also focuses on wireless security, where he studies MAC address randomization, analyzes protocols like WPA-TKIP, and implements low-layer Wi-Fi attacks using commodity hardware. Apart from research, he is also interested in low-level security, reverse engineering, and binary exploitation. He regularly participates in CTFs with KU Leuven's Hacknamstyle CTF team.
  • 20h00 - 20h10: Break
  • 20h10 - 21h00: Docker Security (by Nils De Moor, CTO at WooRank)
Abstract: Docker, the new kid on the block, has taken the Ops world by storm. Suddenly everybody wants applications to be containerized and kick them from a development machine up to a production stack in seconds. But this new paradigm obviously has consequences in terms of security and compliance. In this talk we'll look at how to construct a container around applications and dive deeper into how we can put a tight lock around it, thanks to the built-in security primitives.
Bio: Nils De Moor is co-founder and CTO at WooRank, a SaaS tool for digital marketing agencies to monitor online presence of a brand. By grabbing and calculating millions of data points every day, he developed a passion for automating, scaling and distributing applications. Besides that he is passionate about open source communities and has started some initiatives, like techbelgium.io, Docker and AWS meetup groups, etc.
  • 21h00 - ... : Networking drink

REGISTRATION

Please register via EventBrite: https://owasp-belgium-2016-05-23.eventbrite.com

Coverage

Previous Meeting (8 March 2016) in Leuven

WHEN

Tuesday 8 March 2016

WHERE

Hosted by iMinds-Distrinet Research Group (KU Leuven).

Both speakers are faculty of the Secure Application Development course which is held in Leuven from 7-11 March 2016. OWASP Members get a 10% discount to attend the course.

Address:
Department of Computer Science (foyer at ground floor)
Celestijnenlaan 200 A
3001 Heverlee (google maps)

Routemap: https://distrinet.cs.kuleuven.be/about/route/

PROGRAM

The agenda:

Abstract: In this talk, I will take the audience on a tour of recent evolutions in the JavaScript language (and surrounding ecosystem) and how they can use these changes to their advantage to write better client-side code that is more robust against bugs and other exploits. JavaScript — still unquestionably the dominant client-side language in use on the Web — has evolved significantly over the past five years, with two significant updates to ECMAScript, its defining standard. I will give a brief introduction to the language and its Good and Bad parts and then move on to features added in ECMAScript 5th edition, such as "strict mode", which are by now widely deployed in major browsers. Next, I will look at relevant language features that were introduced recently as part of ECMAScript 6th edition. Finally, I will give a brief introduction to Secure ECMAScript (SES), which is a secure JavaScript dialect that enables the safe embedding of third-party scripts in a webpage, also forming the basis for Google’s Caja compiler.
Bio: Tom Van Cutsem is a senior researcher at Nokia Bell Labs in Antwerp, Belgium. Prior to joining Bell Labs, he was a professor of computer science at Vrije Universiteit Brussel. He sat on the ECMA TC39 committee in charge of standardising JavaScript and actively contributed to the ECMAScript 2015 (a.k.a. “ES6”) standard. Together with Mark S. Miller, he designed and specified ECMAScript’s new reflection API. Tom's broader research interests lie in distributed systems, programming languages, stream processing, concurrency and parallelism. He received his PhD in 2008 from Vrije Universiteit Brussel for his research on AmbientTalk, a distributed scripting language for mobile phones.
Abstract: TBA
Bio: Dan Wallach is a professor in the systems group at Rice University's Department of Computer Science, He manages Rice's computer security lab. His research interests include mobile code, wireless and smartphone security, and the security of electronic voting systems.

REGISTRATION

Please register via EventBrite: https://owasp-belgium-2016-03-08.eventbrite.com

Coverage