You’ve probably never thought of this, but the home automation market in the US was worth approximately $3.2 billion in 2010 and is expected to exceed $5.5 billion in 2016.
Under the hood, the Zigbee and Z-wave wireless communication protocols are the most common used RF technology in home automation systems. Zigbee is based on an open specification (IEEE 802.15.4) and has been the subject of several academic and practical security researches. Z-wave is a proprietary wireless protocol that works in the Industrial, Scientific and Medical radio band (ISM). It transmits on the 868.42 MHz (Europe) and 908.42MHz (United States) frequencies designed for low-bandwidth data communications in embedded devices such as security sensors, alarms and home automation control panels.
We have an updated breakdown of our BlackHat courses here
With the ‘early registration’ discount period coming to an end on May 31, I wanted to provide an overview of what courses we’re offering and how those courses fit together.
Please be sure to take advantage of these discounted prices whilst they’re still available. This summary will help you decide which course is best for you…
1. “Cadet” is our intro course. It provides the theoretical and practical base required to get the most of our other courses. Don’t let the introduction title put you off, this course sets the stage for the rest of the course, and indeed fills in many blanks people might have when performing offensive security assessments. We only offer it on the weekend (27th & 28th) but its really popular so we’ve opened a 2nd classroom. Plenty of space available, so sign up!
23 May 2013
~4 min
By glenn
BlackOps you say?
At SensePost we have quite a range of courses in our Hacking by Numbers series. We feel each one has its own special place. I’ve delivered almost all the courses over the years, but my somewhat biased favourite is our relatively new BlackOps Edition. Myself (Glenn) and Vlad will be presenting this course at BlackHat Vegas in July.
Where Does BlackOps fit in?
Our introductory courses (Cadet and Bootcamp) are meant to establish the hacker mindset – they introduce the student to psychological aspects of an attacker, and build on that to demonstrate real world capability. BlackOps is designed for students who understand the basics of hacking (either from attending Bootcamp/Cadet, or from other experience) and want to acquire deeper knowledge of techniques. We built the course based on our 12 years of experience of performing security assessments.
We’re excited to be presenting our Hacking By Numbers Combat course again at Black Hat USA this year. SensePost’s resident German haxor dude Georg-Christian Pranschke will be presenting this year’s course. Combat fits in right at the top of our course offerings. No messing about, this really is the course where your sole aim is to pwn as much of the infrastructure and applications as possible. It is for the security professional looking to hone their skill-set, or to think like those in Unit 61398. There are a few assumptions though:
When doing wireless assessments, I end up generating a ton of different scripts for various things that I thought it would be worth sharing. I’m going to try write some of them up. This is the first one on decrypting WPA/2 PSK traffic. The second will cover some tricks/scripts for rogue access-points. If you are keen on learn further techniques or advancing your wifi hacking knowledge/capability as a whole, please check out the course Hacking by Numbers: Unplugged, I’ll be teaching at BlackHat Las Vegas soon.
04 March 2013
~1 min
By glenn
SensePost will be at Black Hat Europe 2013 to deliver the Bootcamp module of the Hacking by Numbers series. This method based introductory course emphasizes the structure, approach, and thought-processes involved in hacking (over tools and tricks). The course is popular with beginners, who gain their first view into the world of hacking, as well as experts, who appreciate the sound, structured approach.
A break down of what will be covered during this course:
Hey All,
We’re about locked and loaded down here in ZA – ready to tackle the looooong journey to Vegas for Black Hat. If you’re headed to Black Hat but haven’t yet booked training there’s still time, so I thought I’d push out a brief update on what’s still available from our stable of courses. As many of our courses have sold out we opened second classrooms and as a result have plenty of space to accommodate late comers!
We had published a network protocol analysis challenge for free entry to our BlackHat 2012 Vegas training courses and received seven correct answers. We’d like to thank those who attempted this challenge and hope that they find it useful.
The winner, Peter Af Geijerstam managed to respond first, with the correct answer. As a result, he wins a free place on any of our Hacking By Numbers courses. Here is a brief solution for it:
This year marks a special anniversary for us at SensePost in that we’ve been training at BlackHat for over a decade now. To celebrate this, we thought we’d give away a free ticket to any of our courses on offer at this year’s BlackHat Briefings in Las Vegas.
With data breaches happening almost on a monthly basis these days, everyone is turning to encryption in order to protect their information. Bob, a rather tech-savvy gentleman, works for a FTSE 100 company and they’ve written their own secure message implementation. You’ve been tasked to perform a penetration test and noticed that after compromising their shared document server, an internal web application leaked the source code used by the company for the client and the server.
07 August 2011
~1 min
By marco
On this past Thursday we spoke at BlackHat USA on Python Pickle. In the presentation, we covered approaches for implementing missing functionality in Pickle, automating the conversion of Python calls into Pickle opcodes, scenarios in which attacks are possible and guidelines for writing shellcode. Two tools were released:
Converttopickle.py – automates conversion from Python-like statements into shellcode. Anapickle – helps with the creation of malicious pickles. Contains the shellcode library. Lastly, we demonstrated bugs in a library, a piece of security software, typical web apps, peer-to-peer software and a privesc bug on RHEL6.