Throwback Thursday: Ten memorable Virus Bulletin conference presentations – part 2

With an

excellent conference programme

featuring some of the top experts in the IT security industry and covering some of the most important topics, we have much to look forward to when it comes to

VB2017

, the 27th Virus Bulletin conference. But we also often look back at past conference presentations, not just because we are proud to have had them presented at our conference, but because their content is still very relevant today.

In the second of a two-part blog series (part 1

here

), I look back at ten memorable

Virus Bulletin Conference

presentations from the last decade.

Throwback-Thursday-VB.jpg



Evaluating anti-virus products with field studies

With more than two decades’ worth of experience testing security products, the subject of testing is one that is dear to our hearts at

Virus Bulletin

, and one that regularly appears on the conference programme. One paper on testing that particularly stands out for me is that of

École Polytechnique de Montréal

researchers Fanny Lalonde Lévesque, Carlton R. Davis and José M. Fernandez, presented by the latter at VB2012 in Dallas.

In the paper, the researchers described what must have been the most realistic anti-virus test ever: a study that looked at real people, using their own machines, to gauge the effectiveness of the products being tested. Though unfortunately this methodology scales very badly – which means it has never been used in a real test – I find it useful to keep it at the back of my mind when working on

VB

‘s tests, as it does set some kind of gold standard.


Android – practical security from the ground up

Although the VB2013 last-minute paper from

Google

‘s Adrian Ludwig covered much more than statistics on

Android

malware, this is the part that was picked up by the

press

: there is barely any malware on

Android

. It was also the part that led to strong criticism from the audience in Berlin.

Adrian was right: only a very small percentage of

Android

apps are malicious, especially if you only look at apps downloadable through

Google

‘s official

Play Store

. But the problem isn’t non-existent, and these days

Google

is ready to admit that. Last year at VB2016, members of the

Android

team delivered a Small Talk on

Android

malware and on how they can work with the security community to fight this threat, while at the most recent Black Hat conference,

Google

researchers themselves

revealed

a very targeted malware campaign targeting

Android

.


Apple without a shell – iOS under targeted attack

Let’s be honest: because

iOS

malware is so rare, talks on possible attack vectors against the operating system always have a certain ‘coolness’ factor. But the paper presented by Tao Wei and his

FireEye

colleagues at VB2014 in Seattle didn’t just describe a theoretical attack: the use of enterprise provisioning profiles to distribute malicious apps was observed shortly after the conference in the

Wirelurker

malware.

Wei-3.jpg



The ethics and perils of APT research: an unexpected transition into intelligence brokerage

When I joined

VB

a decade ago, the security industry was making the shift from fighting malware written by the proverbial kid in their parents’ basement to tools written by professional criminals with a clear financial motive. Although (cyber)criminals remain a prominent adversary, the rise of state-sponsored attacks has turned many a security researcher into an intelligence broker.

This shift was discussed in a thought-provoking paper presented at VB2015 in Prague by Juan Andrés Guerrero-Saade who, as part of

Kaspersky

‘s

GReAT

team, has played an active role in the uncovering of many state-sponsored attacks.



BlackEnergy – what we really know about the notorious cyber attacks

One very prominent state-sponsored attack group is that behind the BlackEnergy malware family, which became well known for causing massive power outages in Ukraine in December 2015.

ESET

researchers Robert Lipovsky and Anton Cherepanov have been following BlackEnergy for a number of years now, and have spoken about it at various Virus Bulletin conferences, most recently last year at VB2016 in Denver.

Figure6-blackenergy_dodatok1_decoy_prosecutor.jpg

No doubt, several of the talks on the

VB2017 programme

will prove to be just as memorable when we look back in a few years’ time. There are still 10 last-minute speaker slots left to fill, so submit your

hot research

for a chance to present it in Madrid (deadline 3 September 20017).

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