Kiwicon is a New Zealandcomputer security conference held annually in Wellington from 2007. It brings together a variety of people interested in information security. Representatives of government agencies and corporations attend, along with hackers. The conference format allows for talks, informal discussions, socialising, key signing and competitions. Talks are of various lengths on a wide range of subjects, usually including a wide range of techniques for modern exploits and operational security, security philosophy, New Zealand hacker history, related New Zealand law, and a few talks on more esoteric topics. Kiwicon was founded by Adam Boileau when the annual Australian computer security conference Ruxcon was cancelled for 2007. At the conclusion of Kiwicon X, it was announced that there would be no Kiwicon in 2017. The conference returned for 16-17 November 2018, called "Kiwicon 2038AD", with tickets selling out in under three days by 6 September.
Past Conferences
- "Share The Knowledge"
The inaugural Kiwicon was held during the weekend of 17–18 November 2007 at Victoria University of Wellington. Approximately 200 people from the New Zealand security community attended the two-day event. Talk topics included: the psychology of user security errors, information warfare, hiding files in RAM, cracking with PlayStation, and attacks on: kiosks, telecommunications company ethernet, non-IP networks, and a serious Windows hole.
- "Two Cons, One Vision"
Kiwicon 2k8 was held on the 27th and 28 September, with an attendance of over 250 people. A broader range of attendees arrived, with presale tickets selling out before the doors opened. Attendees were greeted with an array of video phone captures proving the insecurity of video conferencing systems. Topics included: mass surveillance, using honeypots to detect malicious servers, physical security, using search engine optimization to make websites disappear from search results, Bluetooth surveillance, Internet probe counterattacking, speed hacking, and attacks on: wired and mobile phone systems, biometrics, Citrix XenApp, and Windows Vista via heap exploitation.
Kiwicon 6 was on the 17th and 18 November 2012, again at the Wellington Opera House. Talk topics included: hacktivist communities, measuring security, security lifecycle, one-time audio passwords, Bluetooth sniffing, biohacking, phishing, stealth web application reconnaissance, remote wiping smartphones connecting to Exchange, a social network monitoring tool, and a wardriving motorcycle. In reference to a joke from the previous year, a homebrew beer labelled "cyberwar" was given to volunteers and sold at the afterparty.
- "Cyberfriends"
- "It's always 1989 in Computer Security" / "Hackers just wanna have fun"
- "Cyberwar Is Hell"
- "The Truth is In Here"
Kiwicon X was at the larger Michael Fowler Center with almost 2,000 attendees, on 15-18 November 2016. Talk topics included radiation-induced cryptographic failures, a story of active incident response against attacks on Pacnet from Telstra researchers, a phishing automation tool, benefits of containers enabling an application to contain itself, the disconnect between security and business, spoofing GPS by changing the time, why machine learning exploitation is good, a history of lockpicking, remote activation of swipe-card readers, and exploits for iClass RFID, GUIs, OSX, native web-based applications, PHP 7, insecure random number generation, Amazon Web Services, infrared devices, NodeJS, and HTML _blank.
- "Kiwicon 2038"
Advertising controversy
On 29 August 2007 persons associated with Kiwicon used simple XSS attacks to spoof websites of news organisations The New Zealand Herald and New Zealand Computerworld. No actual pages on the servers were altered. Similar attacks were performed in following years on different websites, but these went unreported, as is usual in mainstream press for such attacks.