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Chicago

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Next Chapter Meeting: November 11th, 2010

The next Chicago chapter meeting will be November 11th starting at 6:00pm and running until about 8:30. Space for the meeting is being graciously provided by Morningstar at their downtown Chicago headquarters location (22 West Washington Street Chicago, IL 60602).

Please RSVP (to [email protected]) no later than 4:00pm September 20th to make sure we can get you in the building.

Agenda

  • 6:00-6:30 punch and pie
  • 6:30-8:30 presentations (that may or May Not include a slide deck)

The theme for this quarter's meeting is "Slides Optional, Demos Awesome".

Have a tool, technique or [censored] you can demonstrate to a crowd of information-hungry webappsec people? Bring it in and bring it on.

Tentatively scheduled:

  • Scriptable Hit Tracing and Debugging Using Nerve and Ragweed (Matasano)

Submit ideas for talks to [email protected] and we'll get things rolling.

Also, follow (and/or DM us) on twitter @owaspchicago

We'll firm up the evening's agenda as we get submissions.

General Information

Anyone in our area interested in information 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.

We have a mailing list at: https://lists.owasp.org/mailman/listinfo/owasp-chicago

If you have any questions about the Chicago chapter, please send an email to our chapter leaders Mike Tracy or Jason Witty.


Presentation abstracts

Presentation Archives

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

Where modern network architecture meets legacy application design, we get "The Port 80 Problem": vendors wrapping every conceivable network protocol in a series of POSTs and calling them "safe". These "Webapps In Name Only" are a nightmare for application security specialists.

In this talk, we'll discuss, with case studies, how tools from protocol reverse engineering can be brought to bear on web application security, covering the following areas:

- Locating and Decompiling Java and .NET Code - Structure and Interpretation of Binary Protocols in HTTP - Protocol Debugging Tools - Web App Crypto Tricks

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

A short presentation on the threat models and attack vectors for token-less schemes used to reduce the risk of password-only authentication, but yet do not implement "true" two-factor technologies for logistical costs or user acceptance reasons. We'll go over how device fingerprinting and IP geo-location work and discuss the pros and cons of the solutions.


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Chicago OWASP Chapter Leaders

Mike Tracy

Jason Witty