Tag: inbar raz

  • VB2018 paper: Under the hood – the automotive challenge

    During last week’s Pwn2Own 2019 hacking contest, a Senegalese-Chinese duo managed to hack a Tesla Model 3 . As per the competition’s rules, they were allowed to keep the car and also received a cash prize. Tesla has announced that a fix will be released shortly. Car hacking has become a hot subject in recent…

  • VB2018 paper: Under the hood – the automotive challenge

    During last week’s Pwn2Own 2019 hacking contest, a Senegalese-Chinese duo managed to hack a Tesla Model 3 . As per the competition’s rules, they were allowed to keep the car and also received a cash prize. Tesla has announced that a fix will be released shortly. Car hacking has become a hot subject in recent…

  • VB2018 preview: hacking cars

    In recent years, car hacking has evolved from a mostly theoretical research field involving giggling researchers and scared journalists , to one that actually concerns car owners and manufacturers. It is fitting, then, that at VB2018 next month, two papers will be presented on the subject of car hacking. Inbar Raz, Security Architect at Argus…

  • VB2018 preview: hacking cars

    In recent years, car hacking has evolved from a mostly theoretical research field involving giggling researchers and scared journalists , to one that actually concerns car owners and manufacturers. It is fitting, then, that at VB2018 next month, two papers will be presented on the subject of car hacking. Inbar Raz, Security Architect at Argus…

  • VB2016 paper: APT reports and OPSEC evolution, or: these are not the APT reports you are looking for

    Ever since Mandiant released its APT1 report four years ago, reports on advanced attack groups have been an important fixture in the security industry. These reports are great for gaining an understanding of how such groups operate and, as a not insignificant aside, a nice PR exercise for the companies that publish them. However, one…

  • VB2016 paper: APT reports and OPSEC evolution, or: these are not the APT reports you are looking for

    Ever since Mandiant released its APT1 report four years ago, reports on advanced attack groups have been an important fixture in the security industry. These reports are great for gaining an understanding of how such groups operate and, as a not insignificant aside, a nice PR exercise for the companies that publish them. However, one…