Future live events
July 28 - August 1 from San Jose, CA
USENIX Security '08 - Tech Sessions
17th USENIX Security Symposium
USENIX Security '08 brings together top researchers, practitioners, system administrators, system programmers, and others interested in the latest advances in the security of computer systems and networks. Join the live streaming of the invited talks by industry leaders on highly relevant topics such as Hackernomics by Hugh Thompson from People Security; Political DDoS: Estonia and Beyond by Jose Nazario from Arbor Networks and The Ghost in the Browser and Other Frightening Stories about Web Malware by Niels Provos from Google.
All talks of the "Invited Talks" track on the 17th USENIX Security Symposium will be broadcasted via live streaming from July 30 to August 1. The opening keynote on Wednesday will be broadcasted free of charge.
The charge for participating in three days of live streaming of the "Invited Talks" of USENIX Security '08 is 149 $US if you live outside the EU or 99 EUR (incl. 19% VAT). Linux Magazine and Linux Pro Magazine subscribers are entitled to a 20 percent discount. After the event the archive automatically gives you access to the recorded conference sessions of the live stream.
For more details on the event in San Jose please visit the USENIX Security Symposium website.
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Program of the live streaming
9:00 am
(PDT - Pacific Daylight Time) |
Opening Remarks, Awards, and Keynote Address
Speaker: Paul Van Oorschot, Carleton University
Keynote Address
Dr. Strangevote or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Paper Ballot
Speaker: Debra Bowen, California Secretary of State
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10:30 am |
Coffee break |
11:00 am |
Political DDoS: Estonia and Beyond
Speaker: Jose Nazario, Senior Security Engineer, Arbor Networks
In the spring of 2007, the country of Estonia suffered a deluge of distributed denial of service (DDoS) attacks, coordinated to coincide with street-level protests. These attacks caused nationwide problems for the heavily wired country of Estonia and did so again when they recurred in early 2008. These attacks were not the first such politically motivated attacks and they will certainly not be the last. This talk explores the world of DDoS attacks and their growing role as an online political weapon. It also covers how Arbor Networks measured the Estonia attacks, how other attacks are measured, and what these attacks mean for the Internet at large. |
12:30 pm | Lunch break |
2:00 pm |
Building the Successful Security Software Company
Speaker: Ted Schlein, Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers
Ted will discuss the security market, past and present. He will review what it takes to succeed in building a company and will look at current opportunities. Ted will also share with the audience a few of his successes. |
3:30 pm | Coffee break |
4:00 pm |
From the Casebooks of . . .
Speaker: Mark Seiden, Senior Consultant
In a field with few design principles ("defense in depth"? separate duties?), few rules of thumb, no laws named after people more influential than Murphy, no Plancks or Avogadros to hold Constant, and little quantification of any sort (we count only bad things), it appears the best we can do right now is to tell stories.
Over (enough) beer we conjure up lightly anonymized war stories about late-night phone calls, scary devices, hard-to-find bugs that exploiters somehow found, the backups that didn't, stupid criminals, craven prosecutors, cute hacks ("but don't try this at home"), and pointy-haired bosses. . . . There will be a few of these in this talk, but also some cautionary tales and parables—isomorphs of the Old Stories demonstrating human frailty and that the Law of Unexpected Consequences operates most strongly near the intersection of Bleeding Edge and Slippery Slope. Also, just a bit about the future. |
6:00 pm | End of live streaming
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9:00 am
(PDT - Pacific Daylight Time) |
Security Analysis of Network Protocols
Speaker: John Mitchell, Stanford University
Network security protocols, such as key-exchange and key-management protocols, are notoriously difficult to design and debug. Anomalies and shortcomings have been discovered in standards and proposed standards for a wide range of protocols, including public-key and Diffie-Hellman–based variants of Kerberos, SSL/TLS, and the 802.11i (Wi-Fi2) wireless authentication protocols. Although many of these protocols may seem relatively simple, security protocols must achieve their goals when an arbitrary number of sessions are executed concurrently, and an attacker may use information provided by one session to compromise the security of another.
Since security protocols form the cornerstone of modern secure networked systems, it is important to develop informative, accurate, and deployable methods for finding errors and proving that protocols meet their security requirements. This talk will summarize two methods and discuss some of the case studies carried out over the past several years. One method is a relatively simple automated finite-state approach that has been used by our research group, others, and several years of students in a project course at Stanford to find flaws and develop improvements in a wide range of protocols and security mechanisms. The second method, Protocol Composition Logic (PCL), is a way of thinking about protocols that is designed to make it possible to prove security properties of large practical protocols. The two methods are complemen- tary, since the first method can find errors, but only the second is suitable for proving their absence. The talk will focus on basic principles and examples from the IEEE and IETF standardization process. |
10:30 am |
Coffee break |
11:00 am |
Enterprise Security in the Brave New (Virtual) World
Speaker: Tal Garfinkel, VMware
The move to virtual machine–based computing platforms is perhaps the most significant change in how enterprise computing systems have been built in the past decade. The benefits of moving to virtual infrastructure are substantial, from ease of management and better server utilization to transparently providing a wide range of services from high availability to backup. Despite this sweeping change, the way that we secure these systems is still largely unchanged from how we secure today's physical systems. We must rethink the way we design security in virtual infrastructure, both to cope with the new challenges it introduces and to take advantage of the opportunities it offers.
I will discuss the growing pains of moving from physical to virtual infrastructure in the network and the dissonance this can cause in operational settings: why simply dropping existing firewalls and NIDS into virtual infrastructure can limit flexibility, how new mechanisms can help overcome these limitations, and why these elements are better off being virtual instead of physical. Next, I will look at how virtual machines can affect host security as techniques such as virtual machine introspection become mainstream and the line between host and network security gets increasingly blurred. Finally, I will look at some of the odder and more interesting capabilities virtual platforms will be offering in the next few years which will offer fertile ground for new research. |
12:30 pm | Lunch break |
2:00 pm |
Hackernomics
Speaker: Hugh Thompson, Chief Security Strategist, People Security
Security processes inside most commercial development teams haven't
caught up with the growing threat from organized crime groups that are
becoming better financed, are relying more on automation to find
vulnerabilities, and have figured out how to drive down the cost of
launching a significant attack. This talk looks at why the incentive to
attack and the ability to find flaws are outpacing practiced
application security techniques. It examines how the economics of
software attack and defense ("hackernomics") is changing and looks at some interesting outcomes, such as making vulnerability discovery a viable business. The talk will include several live vulnerability demonstrations to illustrate the exploitation vs. prevention dynamics.
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3:30 pm | Coffee break |
4:00 pm |
10+ Billion Lines of Code Later: Experiences Commercializing a Static Checking Tool
Speakers: Dawson Engler, Stanford University; Ben Chelf, Andy Chou, and Seth Hallem, Coverity
This talk describes lessons learned taking an academic tool that "worked fine" in the lab and using it to check billions of lines of code across several hundred companies. Some ubiquitous themes: reality is weird; what one thinks will matter often doesn't; what one doesn't even think to reject as a possibility is often a first-order effect. |
5:30 pm | End of live streaming |
9:00 am
(PDT - Pacific Daylight Time) |
The Ghost in the Browser and Other Frightening Stories About Web Malware
Speaker: Niels Provos, Google, Inc.
While the Web provides information and services that enrich our lives
in many ways, it has also become the primary vehicle for delivering
malware. Once infected with Web-based malware, an unsuspecting user's
machine is converted into a productive member of the Internet
underground. This talk explores Web-based malware and the
infrastructure supporting it, covering an analysis period of almost two
years. It describes trends observed in Web server compromises, as
well as giving an overview of the life cycle of Web-based malware.
The talk shows that Web malware enables a large number of
questionable activities, ranging from the exfiltration of sensitive
information such as email addresses and credit card information to forming
spamming botnets, which are responsible for a significant fraction of the spam
currently seen on the Internet. |
10:30 am |
Coffee break |
11:00 am |
Managing Insecurity: Practitioner Reflections on Social Costs of Security
Speakers: Darren Lacey, Chief Information Security Officer, Johns Hopkins University/Johns Hopkins Medicine
Nonprofits and local government have experienced more than their share of breaches and notifications over the past several years. The reasons for this are evident: lots of sensitive information, insufficient IT resources, lack of institutional discipline, etc. Clearly more time and resources at these organizations should be dedicated to security.
I discuss whether even identifying the proper balance is a good deal more difficult for public service organizations than has been widely discussed. Will security concerns affect the adoption of electronic medical records, regional health organizations, and nonprofit work? At what point do needed changes in organizational cultures undermine the public mission? What types of security controls and practices are best suited for service agencies? What kinds of research would most help public services? |
12:30 pm | Lunch break |
2:00 pm |
Work-in-Progress Reports (WiPs) and Closing Remarks
Speaker: WiPs Session Chair: Hao Chen, University of California, Davis
The Work-in-Progress reports
(WiPs) session offers short presentations about research in
progress, new results, or timely topics. This is not the place to
re-announce work already published, or re-advertise work already
accepted at another venue. Speakers should submit a
one- or two-paragraph abstract to sec08wips@usenix.org by 6:00 p.m. PDT on Wednesday, July 30, 2008. Make sure to include your name, affiliation, and the title of your talk. The schedule of presentations and accepted abstracts will be posted on the Symposium Web site. The time available will be distributed among the presenters, with each speaker allocated between 5 and 10 minutes. The time limit will be strictly enforced. |
3:30 pm | End of live streaming |
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Future live events
Live and in "slow motion"
You don't have time to spend the whole day at your PC on the days of the conference, and have other things to do at the office?
No problem: after the live transmission of the conference, you can review all of the talks once more individually in the archive - whenever you like, and as often as you like.
Register now
Current archives of events
USENIX '08
2008 USENIX Annual Technical Conference
June 25-27, Boston, MA |
20 percent discount for subscribers to Linux Magazine
Linux Magazine subscribers are entitled to 20 percent discount on commercial live streams or archives of talks. Just specify your subscription number with your order.
Supported players
Java-Applet
Your easiest approach is streaming via the Java applet in your browser. There is no need to install additional software, and you can join in right away. |
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RealPlayer
You can also view the stream in RealPlayer on any operating system. |
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Windows Media Player
Specially for Windows users: Streaming with Media Player
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MPlayer
You can use Mplayer or another player of your choice on Linux |
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More information on the technology
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