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BeNeLux OWASP Day 2016-2

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Revision as of 19:28, 26 October 2016 by LievenDesmet (talk | contribs) (Confirmed speakers Conference)

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OWASP BeNeLux Announcement

  • The Call for speakers is closed!


Confirmed speakers Conference

The OWASP BeNeLux Program Committee

  • Bart De Win / Sebastien Deleersnyder/ Lieven Desmet/ David Mathy, OWASP Belgium
  • Martin Knobloch, OWASP Netherlands
  • Jocelyn Aubert, OWASP Luxembourg


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Event tag is #owaspbnl16

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OWASP BeNeLux conference is free, but registration is required!

Registration via https://owasp-benelux-day-2016-2.eventbrite.com


OWASP BeNeLux training is reserved for OWASP members, and registration is required!

To support the OWASP organisation, we ask training attendees to become an OWASP member, it's only US$50! Students and faculty are invited to become member as well, but can freely attend. Check out the Membership page to find out more.

Registration via https://owasp-benelux-day-2016-2.eventbrite.com


To support the OWASP organisation, consider to become a member, it's only US$50!
Check out the Membership page to find out more.


Venue is

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

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

How to reach the venue?

google maps

By car

By train

Hotel nearby

Trainingday is November 24th

Location

Agenda

Time Description Room TBA Room TBA Room TBA
08h30 - 9h30 Registration
09h30 - 11h00 Training Breakers, defenders and superheroes!
by Riccardo ten Cate
PWN Android Apps with your Custom Built Toolbox
by Steven Wierckx
Why simply deploying HTTPS will not get you an A+ grade
by Philippe De Ryck
11h00 - 11h30 Coffee Break
11h30 - 13h00 Training
13h00 - 14h00 Lunch
14h00 - 15h30 Training
15h30 - 16h00 Coffee Break
16h00 - 17h30 Training

Trainings

Breakers, defenders and superheroes!

In the wonderful world of application security we often learn to break stuff or we learn how to prevent hackers from breaking your stuff. In this training i would love to adres some basic and advanced topics and not only teach developers how to properly test their code like a penetration tester, but also learn the penetration tester to think like a developer so they really can deliver added value when instructing developers on how to fix their code like a baws!

Some of the topics i would like to adresss are:

  • Content security policy and how to defeat it with HTML injections
  • Advanced cross site scripting
  • Cross site request forgery
  • Mass Assignment (Parameter binding) attacks
  • External entity attacks
  • Path/directory traversal attacks (File inclusion attacks)
  • File upload injections
  • Server side template injections
  • Authentication and authorization


PWN Android Apps with your Custom Built Toolbox

Frustrated with the various tools and environments needed to perform mobile pentesting? All available Android test distributions have drawbacks and missing and/or non-working tools etc. Learn how to create your own customized mobile pentesting toolbox with the tools you really want/need.

Not sure which steps to follow when performing a mobile application security assessment? Our renowned trainer, Steven Wierckx, will show you which steps to follow and what issues to focus on.

More details in the course description

Download the full training description


Why simply deploying HTTPS will not get you an A+ grade

20 years after the introduction of HTTPS, it is finally moving towards widespread adoption. As more and more web sites are enabling HTTPS, the attention for correct deployments increases as well. Tools such as Qualys’ SSL Labs server test make it is easy to verify the quality of any domain’s HTTPS deployment, but at the same time show how challenging it is to receive an A+ grade. While the initial deployment of HTTPS may seem straightforward, correctly deploying HTTPS is a daunting task. In this session, participants will learn through hands-on experience how to deploy HTTPS correctly, and how it impacts a Web application. We will cover common Web attacks on HTTPS, and how they are countered by the newest HTTPS security policies, such as HTTP Strict Transport Security (HSTS) and HTTP Public Key Pinning (HPKP).

The learning objectives for this session are:

  • Learning how to deploy HTTPS correctly, with strong ciphers and forward secrecy
  • Understanding the intricacies of HTTPS, and its impact on a Web application, especially in combination with HTTP
  • Understanding common Web attacks against HTTPS, and the newest browser-enforced security policies that counter them

Trainers

Riccardo ten Cate

As a penetration tester and software developer from the Netherlands Riccardo is specialized in web-application security and has extensive knowledge in securing web applications in multiple coding languages.

Steven Wierckx

I’m a Software and Security Tester with 15 years of experience in programming, security testing, source code review, test automation, functional and technical analysis, development and database design. I’m a team player with a constant drive to learn new things. I have a passion for web application security and I write articles for several professional magazines with regards to that topic. I have created several courses on testing software for security problems and I teach courses on secure coding, security awareness, security testing and threat modelling.

Philippe De Ryck

Philippe De Ryck holds a PhD in computer science and is specialized in client-side Web security. Philippe focuses on a sustainable knowledge transfer of his expertise in Web security towards industry partners, mainly through training courses and public dissemination activities. Within iMinds-DistriNet , Philippe leads the Web Security-related training activities.

Conferenceday is November 25th

Agenda

Time Speaker Topic Presentation
08h30 - 09h00 Registration
09h00 - 09h15 Opening
09h15 - 10h00 1st Speaker 1st talk TBD
10h00 - 10h45 2nd Speaker 2nd talk TBD
10h45 - 11h15 Morning Break
11h15 - 12h00 3rd Speaker 3rd talk TBD
12h00 - 12h45 4th Speaker 4th Talk TBD
12h45 - 13h45 Lunch
13h45 - 14h30 5th Speaker 5th Talk TBD
14h30 - 15h15 6th Speaker 6th Talk TBD
15h15 - 15h45 Break
15h45 - 16h30 7th Speaker 7th Talk TBD
16h30 - 17h15 Closing Keynote TBD
17h15 - 17h30 Closing


Talks

Placeholder

Speakers

Placehoder

Speaker information comes here

Social Event,starting at 7PM

Social Event information


Call for Speakers

OWASP AppSec conferences are true security conferences with all talks and presentations focusing on various areas of information security. Topics should focus on the technical and social aspects of security, and should not contain marketing or sales pitches.

We encourage and prioritize submissions covering research and new work impacting:

  • Secure development of web applications.
  • Security testing of web applications.
  • Security of DevOps processes, architectures, and tools.
  • Security of applications designed for mobile devices.
  • Security of Internet of Things devices and platforms.
  • Cloud platform security
  • Browser security
  • HTML5 security
  • OWASP tools or projects in practice

Terms

By your submission you agree to the OWASP Speaker Agreement. It requires that you use an OWASP presentation template or other non-branded template. Presentations may not use company-themed decks or include a company logo except on the speaker bio slide. Failure to observe these requirements will result in talk removal.

All presentation slides will be published on the conference website. Pictures and other materials in presentations should not violate any copyrights. Presentation submitters are solely liable for copyright violations. You may choose any Creative Commons license for your slides, including CC0. OWASP suggests the use of open licenses.

We will cover your travel expenses or costs for accommodations.

Deadlines

  • Submission of proposal closes: 11 September, 2016 – 23:59
  • Notification of acceptance: 2 October, 2016
  • Conference Date: 25 November, 2016

Submission

To submit a proposal, please submit an abstract of your intended presentation (500 to 4000 characters), a brief biography (150 to 800 characters) and a headshot (combine multiple files in one zip file). Your planned presentation time is 40 minutes (excluding ~5 minutes for discussion and change of speaker). Feel free to attach a preliminary version of your presentation if available. Any proposal submitted is subject to a democratic vote by the program committee. Keep in mind: The better your description of the talk, the better picture the program committee will have to review your submission. Please proofread your submission; after approval your abstract, biography, and headshot will be published verbatim into the program and website.

Submission page: https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=owaspbenelux162



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