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Past speeches and talks from the Black Hat Briefings computer security conferences. The Black Hat Briefings USA 2006 was held August August 2-3 in Las Vegas at Caesars Palace. Two days, fourteen tracks, over 85 presentations. Dan Larkin of the FBI was the keynote speaker. Celebrating our tenth year anniversary.

A post convention wrap up can be found at http://www.blackhat.com/html/bh-usa-06/bh-usa-06-index.html Black Hat Briefings bring together a unique mix in security: the best minds from government agencies and global corporations with the underground's most respected hackers. These forums take place regularly in Las Vegas, Washington D.C., Amsterdam, and Tokyo.

If you want to get a better idea of the presentation materials go to http://www.blackhat.com/html/bh-media-archives/bh-multi-media-archives.html#USA-2006 and download them. Put up the pdfs in one window while watching the talks in the other. Almost as good as being there!

Video, audio and supporting materials from past conferences will be posted here, starting with the newest and working our way back to the oldest with new content added as available! Past speeches and talks from Black Hat in an iPod friendly .mp3 audio and .mp4 h.264 192k video format

Black Hat Briefings, Las Vegas 2006 [Audio] Presentations from the security conference Jeff Moss

    • Technologie

Past speeches and talks from the Black Hat Briefings computer security conferences. The Black Hat Briefings USA 2006 was held August August 2-3 in Las Vegas at Caesars Palace. Two days, fourteen tracks, over 85 presentations. Dan Larkin of the FBI was the keynote speaker. Celebrating our tenth year anniversary.

A post convention wrap up can be found at http://www.blackhat.com/html/bh-usa-06/bh-usa-06-index.html Black Hat Briefings bring together a unique mix in security: the best minds from government agencies and global corporations with the underground's most respected hackers. These forums take place regularly in Las Vegas, Washington D.C., Amsterdam, and Tokyo.

If you want to get a better idea of the presentation materials go to http://www.blackhat.com/html/bh-media-archives/bh-multi-media-archives.html#USA-2006 and download them. Put up the pdfs in one window while watching the talks in the other. Almost as good as being there!

Video, audio and supporting materials from past conferences will be posted here, starting with the newest and working our way back to the oldest with new content added as available! Past speeches and talks from Black Hat in an iPod friendly .mp3 audio and .mp4 h.264 192k video format

    Abolade Gbadegesin : The NetIO Stack - Reinventing TCP/IP in Windows Vista

    Abolade Gbadegesin : The NetIO Stack - Reinventing TCP/IP in Windows Vista

    "TCP/IP is on the front lines in defending against network attacks, from intrusion attempts to denial-of-service. Achieving resilience depends on factors from NIC driver quality up through network application behavior. Windows Vista delivers resilience, security and extensibility with the NetIO stack-a re-architected and re-written TCP/IP stack. Windows Vista Network Architect Abolade Gbadegesin will provide an in-depth technical description of the new architecture and new features, and will provide an insider’s view of how Microsoft listened and responded to feedback from the security community.

    Abolade Gbadegesin is an Architect in the Windows Networking and Device Technologies Division, and is responsible for leading the redesign and implementation of the Windows networking stack for Windows Vista, incorporating native support for IPv6, IPSec and hardware offload capabilities. Abolade is a member of the Windows architecture group and the networking architecture team. When time permits, he works as a comic book artist, practices piano and breakdance and Argentine tango, and contributes performances at various spoken word events as a founding member of the Learned Hearts Brigade."

    • 58 Min.
    Adrian Marinescu: Windows Vista Heap Management Enhancements - Security, Reliability and Performance

    Adrian Marinescu: Windows Vista Heap Management Enhancements - Security, Reliability and Performance

    "All applications and operating systems have coding errors and we have seen technical advances both in attack and mitigation sophistication as more security vulnerabilities are exploiting defects related to application and OS memory and heap usage. Starting with W2k3 and XP/SP2, Windows incorporated technologies to reduce the reliability of such attacks. The heap manager in Windows Vista pushes the innovation much further in this area. This talk will describe the challenges the heap team faced and the technical details of the changes coming in Windows Vista.

    Adrian Marinescu, development lead in the Windows Kernel group, has been with Microsoft Corporation since 1998. He joined then to work on few core components such as user-mode memory management, kernel object management and the kernel inter-process communication mechanism. In the heap management area, Adrian designed and implemented the Low Fragmentation Heap, a highly scalable addition to the Windows Heap Manager, and he currently focuses on techniques of reducing the reliability of certain well known heap exploits."

    • 1 Std. 7 Min.
    Alex Stamos & Zane Lackey: Breaking AJAX Web Applications: Vulns 2.0 in Web 2.0

    Alex Stamos & Zane Lackey: Breaking AJAX Web Applications: Vulns 2.0 in Web 2.0

    "The Internet industry is currently riding a new wave of investor and consumer excitement, much of which is built upon the promise of "Web 2.0" technologies giving us faster, more exciting, and more useful web applications. One of the fundamentals of "Web 2.0" is known as Asynchronous JavaScript and XML (AJAX), which is an amalgam of techniques developers can use to give their applications the level of interactivity of client-side software with the platform-independence of JavaScript.

    Unfortunately, there is a dark side to this new technology that has not been properly explored. The tighter integration of client and server code, as well as the invention of much richer downstream protocols that are parsed by the web browser has created new attacks as well as made classic web application attacks more difficult to prevent.

    We will discuss XSS, Cross-Site Request Forgery (XSRF), parameter tampering and object serialization attacks in AJAX applications, and will publicly release an AJAX-based XSRF attack framework. We will also be releasing a security analysis of several popular AJAX frameworks, including Microsoft Atlas, JSON-RPC and SAJAX. The talk will include live demos against vulnerable web applications, and will be appropriate for attendees with a basic understanding of HTML and JavaScript.

    Alex Stamos is a founding partner of iSEC Partners, LLC, a strategic digital security organization. Alex is an experienced security engineer and consultant specializing in application security and securing large infrastructures, and has taught multiple classes in network and application security. He is a leading researcher in the field of web application and web services security and has been a featured speaker at top industry conferences such as Black Hat, CanSecWest, DefCon, SyScan, Microsoft BlueHat and OWASP App Sec. He holds a BSEE from the University of California, Berkeley.

    Zane Lackey is a Security Consultant with iSEC Partners, LLC, a strategic digital security organization. Zane regularly performs application penetration testing and code review engagements for iSEC, and his research interests include web applications and emerging Win32 vulnerability classes. Prior to iSEC, Zane focused on Honeynet research at the University of California, Davis Computer Security Research Lab under noted security researcher Dr. Matt Bishop. "

    • 1 Std. 11 Min.
    Alexander Kornbrust: Oracle Rootkits 2.0

    Alexander Kornbrust: Oracle Rootkits 2.0

    "This presentation shows the next (2.) generation of Oracle Rootkits. In the first generation, presented at the Blackhat 2005 in Amsterdam, Oracle Rootkits were implemented by modifying database views to hide users, jobs and sessions.

    The next generation presented at the BH USA is using more advanced techniques to hide users/implement backdoors. Modifications on the data dictionary objects are no longer necessary so it’s not possible to find the new generation of rootkits by checksumming the data dictionary objects.

    Alexander Kornbrust is the founder and CEO of Red-Database-Security GmbH, a company specialized in Oracle security. Red-Database-Security is one of the leading companies in Oracle security. He is responsible for Oracle security audits and Oracle anti-hacker trainings and gave various presentations on security conferences like Black Hat, Bluehat, IT Underground.

    Alexander Kornbrust has worked with Oracle products as an Oracle DBA and Oracle developer since 1992. During the last six years, Alexander has found over 220 security bugs in different Oracle products."

    • 43 Min.
    Alexander Sotirov: Hotpatching and the Rise of Third-Party Patches

    Alexander Sotirov: Hotpatching and the Rise of Third-Party Patches

    "Hotpatching is a common technique for modifying the behavior of a closed source applications and operating systems. It is not new, and has been used by old-school DOS viruses, spyware, and many security products. This presentation will focus on one particular application of hotpatching: the development of third-party security patches in the absence of source code or vendor support, as illustrated by Ilfak Guilfanov’s unofficial fix for the WMF vulnerability in December of 2005.

    The presentation will begin with an overview of common hotpatching implementations, including Microsoft’s hotpatching support in Windows 2003, the standard 5-byte jump overwrite and dynamic binary translation systems. I will talk briefly about the deployment and compatibility issues surrounding third party security patches, before getting technical and delving deep into the process of hotpatch development. I will present techniques for exploit-guided debugging and reverse engineering of vulnerable functions, as well as code for hotpatch injection and binary patching.

    The most fun part will be at the end of the presentation, when I will do a live demo of analyzing a vulnerability and building a hotpatch for it in 15 minutes."

    • 56 Min.
    Alexander Tereshkin: Rootkits: Attacking Personal Firewalls

    Alexander Tereshkin: Rootkits: Attacking Personal Firewalls

    "Usually, a personal firewall and an antivirus monitor are the only tools run by a user to protect the system from any malware threat with any level of sophistication. This level significantly increases when malware authors add kernel mode rootkit components to their code in order to avoid easy detection. As rootkit technologies become more and more popular, we can clearly see that many AV vendors begin to integrate anti-rootkit code into their products. However, the firewall evolution is not so obvious. Firewall vendors widely advertise their enhancements to the protection against user mode code injections and similar tricks, which are used by almost any malware out there to bypass more simple firewalls, keeping much less attention to the kernel mode threats. In fact, just a few vendors evolve their kernel mode traffic filter techniques to pose an obstacle for a possible kernel rootkit.

    This presentation will focus on the attacks which may be performed by an NT kernel rootkit to bypass a personal firewall in its core component: the traffic hooking engine. Starting from the brief overview of the entire NT network subsystem, the talk will demonstrate both simple and advanced methods firewalls use to hook in-out traffic. Every firewall trick will be examined in details, and an antidote will be offered to each. It will also be shown that it is possible for a rootkit to operate at a lower level than current firewalls by using only DKOM techniques. The presentation will be accompanied by a live demo of the proof of concept rootkit which is able to bypass even the most advanced personal firewalls available on the market. Finally, a possible solution for hardening firewalls against discussed attacks will be presented.

    Alexander Tereshkin specializes in the NT kernel mode coding, focusing on the network interaction. He is interested in rootkit technology in its both offensive and defensive sides. He has worked on various projects that required comprehensive knowledge of Ke, Mm, Ps NT kernel subsystems as well as NDIS internals. His x86 code analyzing engines are used in a few commercial products. In addition to his day work, Alex likes to reverse engineer malware samples. He is also a contributor to rootkit.com."

    • 51 Min.

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