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Difference between revisions of "Rochester"

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(Added March meeting)
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Please note that for informal meetings at Mac Gregor's, everybody needs to pay for their own food and drinks.
 
Please note that for informal meetings at Mac Gregor's, everybody needs to pay for their own food and drinks.
  
   '''July Meeting'''
+
   '''March Meeting'''
  
<b>When:</b> Cancelled
+
<b>What:</b> Joint ISSA and OWASP meeting - De-Anonymizing Anonymous
  
  '''August Meeting'''
+
<b>When:</b> Thursday, March 29th at 5:30pm
  
<b>What:</b> Joint ISSA and OWASP meeting - Presentation on Incident Response
+
<b>Location:</b> Nixon Peabody LLP - 1300 Clinton Square, Susan B. Anthony 14th Floor Conference Room - Rochester, NY 14604
  
<b>When:</b> TBD
+
<b>Abstract:</b> What do you see when you take the Guy Fawkes mask off?  In 2011, Imperva managed to witness an assault by hacktivist group Anonymous including the use of social media for communications and, most importantly, their attack methods.  Since Anonymous' targets are highly variable, anyone can fall victim and security professionals need to know how to prepare.
 +
 +
This talk will give a walk-through the key stages of an Anonymous campaign:
  
<b>Location:</b> TBD
+
*      Recruitment and communication: We show how Anonymous leverages social networks to recruit its members and pick a target.
 +
*      Application attack:  We detail and sequence the steps Anonymous hackers deploy to take data and bring down websites.
 +
*      DDoS: In this final stage, we shed light on the DDoS techniques deployed to take down websites.
  
 +
Finally, we recommend key mitigation steps that organizations need to take if they ever become a target.
 +
 +
<b>Speaker:</b> Noa is a senior security strategist at Imperva. In this role Noa researches and analyzes the trends in the threat landscape. She is a frequent contributor to different security magazines, comments on security-breaking news, and is regularly invited to speak at industry events. Currently, Noa also writes a bi-weekly column on hacker trends and techniques for SecurityWeek.  Previously, she held the position of a senior security researcher for Imperva's Application Defense Center. She holds a MSc degree (specializing in information security) from Tel-Aviv University.
 +
 +
<b>Please RSVP to [mailto:[email protected] [email protected]] by Friday, March 23 so we can get a headcount.</b>
 +
 +
<b>Directions:</b>
 +
 +
From the East:
 +
 +
* Take I-490 west towards Rochester
 +
* Take the Clinton Avenue exit
 +
* Clinton Square Building is about two blocks down on left
 +
* Go through Broad Street/Clinton intersection, passing Clinton Square Building on the left
 +
* Entrance to parking garage is on left just after Broad Street
 +
* Take garage elevator to lobby; then take lobby elevators to 14th floor
 +
* The meeting will be in Conference Room 14A, the Susan B. Anthony Room
 +
 +
From the West:
 +
 +
* Take I-490 East towards Rochester
 +
* Stay in the right lane to cross the Troup-Howell bridge. Take exit 15 for South Ave./Rte. 15
 +
* Turn left at 2nd light
 +
* Turn left at light onto Clinton
 +
* Stay in second lane from the left
 +
* Clinton Square Building (corner of Clinton & Broad) is about two blocks down on left
 +
* Go through Broad Street/Clinton intersection, pass Clinton Square Building on the left, and take first driveway on left to enter Clinton Square Parking garage
 +
* Take garage elevator to lobby; then take lobby elevators to 14th floor
 +
* The meeting will be in Conference Room 14A, the Susan B. Anthony Room
  
 
== Past Events ==
 
== Past Events ==

Revision as of 23:17, 18 March 2012


Welcome to the OWASP Rochester Local Chapter

Welcome to the local Rochester chapter homepage. The chapter leader is Andrea Cogliati

<paypal>Rochester</paypal>

Help Us Improve Our Chapter

We are looking for feedback on how to better our chapter. If you'd like to give us feedback, we have an anonymous survey setup here:

http://www.surveymonkey.com/s/MTBH3S2

Participation

OWASP chapter meetings are free and open to anyone interested in application security. We encourage members to give presentations on specific topics and to contribute to the local chapter by sharing their knowledge with others. Prior to participating with OWASP please review the Chapter Rules.

The Rochester chapter has two mailing lists: one for announcements and one for general discussion. The announce list is for official communications (e.g meeting announcements, web site updates, etc). The discussion list is for general participation and everyone is encouraged to post. The announce mailing list can be found here. The discussion mailing list can be found here. You can also review the announce and discussion e-mail archives to see what folks have been talking about. Please make sure you are subscribed to announce to receive any last minute meeting info.

Local Officers


Meeting Dates & Location

Dates: The third Monday of every month, starting at 6:00 PM.

Types of events: Formal meeting (featuring a presentation) in odd numbered months, informal event (open forum with beer and wings) in even numbered months

Locations:

  • Locations for formal meetings will be announced with the corresponding meeting so please check here or the mailing announcement list for specific meeting location details.
  • Beer and wings at Mac Gregor's Grill & Tap Room, 300 Jefferson Rd, NY 14623 Google Maps


Meetings reminders are sent to the OWASP Rochester Announcement distribution list at least one week prior to a meeting.

If you or your organization is interested in donating meeting space please contact one of the local officers listed above. The space should be able to accommodate at least 15 people.

Please note that for informal meetings at Mac Gregor's, everybody needs to pay for their own food and drinks.

 March Meeting

What: Joint ISSA and OWASP meeting - De-Anonymizing Anonymous

When: Thursday, March 29th at 5:30pm

Location: Nixon Peabody LLP - 1300 Clinton Square, Susan B. Anthony 14th Floor Conference Room - Rochester, NY 14604

Abstract: What do you see when you take the Guy Fawkes mask off? In 2011, Imperva managed to witness an assault by hacktivist group Anonymous including the use of social media for communications and, most importantly, their attack methods. Since Anonymous' targets are highly variable, anyone can fall victim and security professionals need to know how to prepare.

This talk will give a walk-through the key stages of an Anonymous campaign:

  • Recruitment and communication: We show how Anonymous leverages social networks to recruit its members and pick a target.
  • Application attack: We detail and sequence the steps Anonymous hackers deploy to take data and bring down websites.
  • DDoS: In this final stage, we shed light on the DDoS techniques deployed to take down websites.

Finally, we recommend key mitigation steps that organizations need to take if they ever become a target.

Speaker: Noa is a senior security strategist at Imperva. In this role Noa researches and analyzes the trends in the threat landscape. She is a frequent contributor to different security magazines, comments on security-breaking news, and is regularly invited to speak at industry events. Currently, Noa also writes a bi-weekly column on hacker trends and techniques for SecurityWeek. Previously, she held the position of a senior security researcher for Imperva's Application Defense Center. She holds a MSc degree (specializing in information security) from Tel-Aviv University.

Please RSVP to [email protected] by Friday, March 23 so we can get a headcount.

Directions:

From the East:

  • Take I-490 west towards Rochester
  • Take the Clinton Avenue exit
  • Clinton Square Building is about two blocks down on left
  • Go through Broad Street/Clinton intersection, passing Clinton Square Building on the left
  • Entrance to parking garage is on left just after Broad Street
  • Take garage elevator to lobby; then take lobby elevators to 14th floor
  • The meeting will be in Conference Room 14A, the Susan B. Anthony Room

From the West:

  • Take I-490 East towards Rochester
  • Stay in the right lane to cross the Troup-Howell bridge. Take exit 15 for South Ave./Rte. 15
  • Turn left at 2nd light
  • Turn left at light onto Clinton
  • Stay in second lane from the left
  • Clinton Square Building (corner of Clinton & Broad) is about two blocks down on left
  • Go through Broad Street/Clinton intersection, pass Clinton Square Building on the left, and take first driveway on left to enter Clinton Square Parking garage
  • Take garage elevator to lobby; then take lobby elevators to 14th floor
  • The meeting will be in Conference Room 14A, the Susan B. Anthony Room

Past Events

May 2011 Meeting

Michael Coates webinar on Attack-Aware Applications.
https://owasp.webex.com/owasp/ldr.php?AT=pb&SP=MC&rID=87764002&rKey=14191b8f8c73dabc

May 5, 2011

MercuryFest Speakers: Ralph Durkee, Andrea Cogliati, Duane Peifer Topic: SSL Man-in-the-Middle and Spoofing Attacks

March 2011 Meeting

Topic: Pastebin Scrapping
Speaker: Silas Cutler, Global Crossing, Security Architect

January 2011 Meeting

Topic: State of OWASP and the State of Web Application Security
Speaker: Ralph Durkee, Durkee Consulting

August Meeting 2010

Topic: Man in the Middle Attacks: SSL Spoofing
Speaker: Duane Peifer, UberGuard Information Security and Ralph Durkee, Durkee Consulting

June Meeting 2010

Topic: Client Side Exploits 101
Speaker: JP Bourget, BS IT, RIT 2005; MS Computer Security and Information Assurance, RIT 2008; CISSP; MCSE, CSS

May Meeting 2010

Topic: New Techniques in Application Intrusion Detection
Speaker: Al Huizenga, Director of Product Management, Mykonos Software, Inc.

February Meeting 2010

Ralph Durkee presented a recap of the recent AppSec conference in DC.
Andrea Cogliati gave a talk on Identity Federation and Claim-based Security.


Oct 29-30 2008 - Rochester Security Summit 2008
The Rochester OWASP chapter in partnership with other Rochester institutions is organizing the third annual Rochester Security Summit Oct 29-30 during National Cyber Security Awareness Month. This year we'll have a full day dedicated to application security and we are are working to bring to Rochester the best national acclaimed speakers.

Visit Rochester Security Summit Site for details.

Past Presentations

January Meeting 2011 State of OWASP and the State of Web Application Security by Ralph Durkee PPT PDF

August Meeting 2010 Man in the Middle Attacks: SSL Spoofing by Duane Peifer PPT PDF
August Meeting 2010 Man in the Middle Attacks: SSL Spoofing by Ralph Durkee PPT PDF

May Meeting 2010 New Techniques in Application Intrusion Detection by Al Huizenga PPTX PDF
May Meeting 2010 Identity Federation and Claim-based Security by Andrea Cogliati PDF

February Meeting 2010 DC AppSec Conference Recap by Ralph Durkee PPT

October Hackerfest 2009 Introduction to OWASP Rochester by Ralph Durkee, Lou Leone PPT

September OWASP 2009 Securing Apache Web Servers with Mod Security & CIS Benchmark by Ralph Durkee PPT Open Office

May OWASP 2009 Key Management - One Perspective by Lou Leone PPT

May IEEE 2009 Introduction to OWASP, presented by Ralph Durkee and Andrea Cogliati PPT

January 2009 Paranoid Programming Practices, by Lou Leone and Aaron Witt PPT

May 2008 Database Encryption, by Ralf Durkee PPT

January 2008 SQL Injection and Dynamic SQL, by Andrea Cogliati ZIP

September 2007 2007 OWASP Top 10 Most Critical Web Application Security Vulnerabilities, by Ralph Durkee PowerPoint

October 2006 The first of the OWASP top ten: unvalidated input, by Steve Buck. PowerPoint

April 2006 PGP: Encryption for e-mail and web applications, by Ralph Durkee PDF

February 2006 Identity Theft, Phishing and Pharming, by Danny Allan PDF

February 2006 Secure e-mail, by Thomas Bullinger PDF

January 2006 PCI Compliance, by Pat Massey, Ralf Durkee, Maureen Baran PDF

September 2005 Two Factor Authentication for Java Applications with Client Certificates, by Ralf Durkee PDF Open Office

April 2005 Avoiding Backend Exploitation of Mail Forms, by Max Kessler PowerPoint Open Office

March 2005 Bringing Two-Factor Authentication to Web Applications, by Michael Starks PowerPoint Open Office

February 2005 Insecure Storage, by Chris Karr PowerPoint

January 2005 Access Control and Session Mgmnt, by Steve Buck PowerPoint Open Office

November 2004 Intro to OWASP by Ralf Durkee. Demonstration of SQL Injection attack and prevention, by Paul Cupo PowerPoint