So on 4th of January, two days after coming back from aforementioned 31C3 we gave a talk for roughly 50 people, mostly with no technical background - and it seems that we were able to share what we intended. We used MITMProxy and simple word replacement: to. Together with piorek from Warsaw Hackerspace we designed a small setup of a "YourFavoriteCafe" network, which injected some CSS styles in every page, inverting each in the X axis. Maybe we should interact with the audience? MITM attack sounds nice.
#Truecrypt szyfrowanie dysku android#
SMS and calls: TextSecure and RedPhone.Īnd an extra: Android security: Cyanogenmod, app priviliges and disk encryption.Īfter reviewing the whole thing I noticed that the whole presentation may seem a little bit too paranoid. emails, files and PGP (introduction and invitation for a real CryptoParty workshop). The fourth section only for people who are really aware of their digital surroundings, because without that the whole process is pointless. Passwords on files (better than plaintext emails anyway!). What does it mean to be encrypted? Why can't we use TrueCrypt anymore? Symmetric and asymmetric encryption. A brief mention of TOR (which I consider a tool for people who know they are doing, not for everyday use). Firefox or Chromium (I don't trust Chrome as much). The second covered online security and I thought it most vital for a newbie.
If you are not paying for it, you're not the customer you're the product being sold. From my experience omitting this one is a real deal-breaker for most of attendees.Ī good quote and creed for the presentation: What is the threat? For whom? Why is it so? Naming cyber-criminals, corporations and government agencies, telling a little about their targets and techniques, trying not to sound too paranoid. The first one - an introduction - answered a question: why. I tried to design it this way so every section would build on the previous, and each was more optional for a normal user. As the form of workshop was unfavorable in the Museum's conditions: more than 40 predicted guests with almost no prior knowledge and only 90 minutes for the event - I decided to go with a lecture in four parts. Since CryptoParty may mean many things - and I've attended a workshop about it during the 31C3 - it was important to have a clear vision in mind. I'm very glad that the organizers thought about educating their guests and showing them a real face of the Internet, not only phrased as a contemporary work of art. At the very end of the previous year I was invited by a Museum of Modern Art in Warsaw to conduct a CryptoParty at the finissage of "Privacy settings" exhibition.