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Revision as of 20:01, 25 January 2017

For more information on OWASP Chicago meetings, please visit http://www.meetup.com/OWASP-Chicago-Chapter/ for more information.

We have a very active 2016 summer planned! June & August Chapter meetings and a Hackathon in the works for July. Stay tuned and be sure to spread the word!

If you're interested in speaking, sponsoring or hosting an event, please contact us.

Anyone in our area interested in application security is welcome to attend. Our meetings are informal and encourage open discussion of all aspects of application security. We invite attendees to give short presentations about specific topics.

Make sure you sign up for the mailing list to receive meeting announcements. Our mailing list is at: https://lists.owasp.org/mailman/listinfo/owasp-chicago

Follow (and/or DM us) on Twitter: @owaspchicago
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/groups/4049846

Chat with us on SLACK. https://owasp.slack.com/

If you have any questions about the Chicago chapter, please send an email to Michael Allen or Joe Blanchard


October Chapter Meeting:

Register Here: https://www.meetup.com/OWASP-Chicago-Chapter/events/234416569/

Agenda:

6:00-6:30pm - Gather and mingle

(Food & Beverages provided courtesy of sponsor)

6:30-7:15pm - Random Number Generation - Lava Lamps, Clouds and the IoT

Random numbers are the basis of security for all cryptography, yet they are often taken for granted. Learn why random numbers are so hard to generate and validate, compare different technologies in use today across virtualized environments, and discuss operational steps to take the risk out of random numbers and help secure cryptosystems even into the era of quantum computers.

Bio: Richard Moulds has more than 15 years experience in the security industry with a specific focus on cryptography. Richard has worked with customers in the areas of card and mobile payments, PKI, storage encryption, hardware security modules and enterprise key management. He has participated in OWASP, PCI DSS, OASIS, CSA and Quantum Safe industry groups and is the author of Key Management for Dummies.

7:15-7:35pm - Coffee Science w/ Intelligensia Coffee

Hackers and coffee go together like peanut butter and jelly, because as David Lynch once said, "Coffee has always seemed to facilitate thinking and catching ideas. Not only that, but the flavor of coffee is beyond the beyond good.” So do you want to know how to achieve the perfect cup of coffee? This talk will give you the lowdown on the science behind roasting, the chemical reactions that take place, the different varietals of beans and more.

7:45-8:30pm - What is Attribute-Based Access Control (ABAC) and how can I use it to secure APIs?

Abstract: Securing applications is more than just about identity. There have been many successful protocols and standards around authentication and federation (SAML, Open ID, OAuth, OIDC...). But they all tend to focus on users only - on the identity. Going beyond who the user is, we can start looking at what users want to do. This is where ABAC kicks. ABAC is a policy-driven way of defining fine-grained access control that can be reused across APIs, microservices, web applications, and data layers. Instead of hard-coding authorization into your application, externalize it using ABAC.

Bio: David Brossard works at Axiomatics and helps enterprise customers design authorization solutions that enable secure data sharing in compliance with compliance and privacy regulations. David's main area of expertise is SOA security. David has published several papers and contributed to several books on the topic of SOA security, governance, and attribute-based access control. David is also one the key figures in the OASIS eXtensible Access Control Markup Language (XACML) Technical Committee. In particular David has been driving standardization efforts around the developer experience on fine-grained, attribute-based access control.


Interesting in being a sponsor or presenting at an event? Contact us at [email protected]

Past Talks

Codeburner - SCA. Video (https://vimeo.com/163686756)

Harnessing the Security Champion Model. By Joe Blanchard - Video (https://vimeo.com/163686635)

Application Security Automation and Governance by Michael Allen

'Android Application Security: Common Pitfalls and How To Avoid Them by Drew Suarez

Introducing idb: Simplified Blackbox iOS App Pentesting by Daniel Mayer

Tips for Building a Successful Application Security Program by Clint Pollock

You Will Perish In Flames: Simple Rules For Safely Handling Crypto by Thomas Ptacek

A9: Discovering Vulnerable Components with OWASP Dependency-Check by Steve Springett

How to Get the Most Out of Your Security Consulting Experience by Erin Ptacek

Repsheet: A Behavior Based Approach to Web Application Security by Aaron Bedra

Forget About BYOD: Develop a Realistic Mobile Security Policy by Tom Bain

Android Internals: From Forensics to Vulnerabilities by Drew Suarez

An Application Pen Tester’s Intro to Android Internals by Tom Palarz

Bad Cocktail: Spear Phishing - Mike Zusman - Presentation slides here

Making Money on the Web The Blackhat Way - Jeremiah Grossman - Presentation slides here

Extreme Client-Side Exploitation - Nate McFeters - Presentation slides here

Automated Thrash Testing - Andre Gironda - Presentation slides here

Defeating Information Leak Prevention - Eric Monti - Presentation slides here


[1]Webapps In Name Only Thomas Ptacek, Matasano Security

[2]Token-less strong authentication for web applications: A Security Review Cory Scott, ABN AMRO

[3]Secure Password Storage John Steven, Cigital

[4]Stripe CTF 2.0; A Walkthrough Jeff Jarmoc, Dell SecureWorks and Zack Fasel, Dubsec Labs


Chicago OWASP Chapter Leaders

  • Michael Allen - Chapter Lead
  • Joe Blanchard - Chapter Lead
  • Rob Halvert - Presenter Lead
  • Adam Lewis - Venue Lead
  • Christopher Ehinger - Sponsor Lead
  • Vaune Carr
  • John Downey
  • Matt Konda - Previous Chapter Lead