The conference badge still offered an enjoyable puzzle plus, you had all sorts of friendly people throwing out pointers on where to look next. This was probably the perfect DefCon for first-time attendees.Įven with these differences, much still felt the same. It was great! I even grabbed a few hardware badges, which in the past were almost always sold out. This time, I breezed through everything in five minutes. The previous time I stood in line to get my conference badge, I waited for close to three hours. The typical nickname of ‘linecon’ didn’t apply this year. How was it different? The normal sea of people totaling around 20,000 looked to be more like 3,000. This month we returned to Vegas after a year hiatus to a very different DefCon 29. A celebration where hackers and thought leaders come together to discuss new findings and topics, compete against each other in capture-the-flag competitions, and party with new and old colleagues and friends. For those who don’t know, DefCon is a celebration disguised as a cybersecurity conference.
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