30 lines
1.4 KiB
Markdown
30 lines
1.4 KiB
Markdown
---
|
||
layout: post
|
||
title: "Ethical Hacking 2012"
|
||
date: 2011-05-12 20:54:42
|
||
tags: [conference]
|
||
permalink: /blog/2011/5/12/ethical-hacking-2011
|
||
published: true
|
||
author:
|
||
name: Gergely Polonkai
|
||
email: gergely@polonkai.eu
|
||
---
|
||
|
||
Today I went to the Ethical Hacking conference with my boss. It was my first
|
||
appearance at such conferences, but I hope there will be more. Although we
|
||
just started to redesign our IT security infrastructure with a 90% clear goal,
|
||
it was nice to hear that everything is vulnerable. I was thinking if we should
|
||
sell all our IT equipments, fire all our colleagues (you know, to prevent
|
||
social engineering), and move to the South Americas to herd llamas or sheep,
|
||
so the only danger would be some lurking pumas or jaguars. Or I simply leave
|
||
my old background image on my desktop, from the well-known game, which says:
|
||
Trust is a weakness.
|
||
|
||
Anyways, the conference was really nice. We heard about the weaknesses of
|
||
Android, Oracle, and even FireWire. They showed some demos about everything,
|
||
exploited some free and commercial software with no problem at all. We have
|
||
seen how much power the virtualisation admin has (although I think it can be
|
||
prevented, but I’m not sure yet). However, in the end, we could see that the
|
||
Cloud is secure (or at least it can be, in a few months or so), so I’m not
|
||
totally pessimistic. See you next time at Hacktivity!
|