 So welcome to the contest and events closing ceremonies. I'm Grifter. This is Panadero over here. Yeah. So we're the new leads for C&E. It's actually this year we're over contest events, villages, parties, and the demo labs. So not a lot, just like a couple things. Yeah, we're kind of lazy. Thanks, man. So thank you guys for putting up with us all you organizers while we figured out how to get things right this year. New venue, new leads. But yeah, let's roll. We don't have a ton of time. So I'm just going to go through the deck and whatever. Oh, magic. That's it's still it's it's we're almost there. It's okay. What is that? I'm not worried about it. Before we didn't have a slide. This is all right. So first off, we just want to say thank you to these fine folks over here, our contest and events goons. So please give them a round of applause. I want to say that you guys saw us like running around like crazy or whatever, but we were just sitting on the couches over there. So couches were nice this year, right? Couches, who knew? All right. So this year again, thanks to all of the organizers and the contestants, huge, huge round of applause for those guys. Seriously, you have no idea how early these guys start planning. We do now. Yeah, it's it's crazy. It's like February and they're like, all right, let's roll. Like I'm like, what they're like, sorry, we're late. We usually we start in January. We're like, please stop. Like, is this what this is going to be like? So 29 contests, 16 events, 12 villages, you know, multiple parties and all the other stuff we had this year new. If you guys are here on Saturday, these tables out here where the demo labs, there are people showing off tools. One of the one of the things we're doing there was we get a lot of submissions to the CFP like the submission process and the review board goes through things and we're like, oh, like that sounds really cool. But I don't know if it's an hour long talk like on a stage in a giant room. And so but we want to make sure that content gets out there. So we put them out and let people come up and see what they were doing and talk to them. So it seemed like people liked it. So we'll be bringing it back next year. Let's roll straight into it. This is kind of in alphabetical order. And then I'll say that and immediately go to something with the letter D. But organizers, please keep this like brief because we got a roll on. So Def Con bots. Yeah. And if so, it's going to be what's lovely, like I said, kind of alphabetical order. So beard and mustache get ready to roll. And if you want to start kind of getting ready as you see the letters approaching where your contest is going to be at, that would be awesome. Okay. Def Con bots is. Def Con bots is. Autonomous robots that shoot lasers at moving targets. It's really hard to do. And these guys build robots to do that. All the software, the hardware. This year they had to encode messages in their lasers that they're shooting at the targets. And actually one of the teams went from the qualifier third place to second place in the finals by exploiting a security hole in the laser protocol. So these are first, second, third team, monkey business team Pew Pew monkey business slaughtered everyone hit like almost 45 targets in 90 seconds in the qualifiers. And we have a special award this year. We have the Def Con bots really dark, dark gray badge addendum that goes on the badge. So that goes to first place. Thanks. Where's my beard and mustache at? Anyone? Anyone? Anyone? Jack, Jack, Jack, Jack, Jack. Those people had beards. And cool. Beverage cooling. He's coming. So beer chilling was a thing again this year, 10 years. I took it over. Well, we code it this year. I think we're going to continue doing that. We had two categories, the unlimited and the hack together, which ended up being really quite effective. Our biggest challenge this year was we were through a hole in the wall and nobody really was like, hey, there's this guy with a cardboard sign saying free beer. People were like, that's not real. Totally was. So yeah. So this year we had team Hebrew. They won the unlimited challenge with a truly ghetto fantastic device. It was amazing. And then array of not won the hack together. Guy found like a bunch of junk lying around the hotel and built something. It was amazing. So round of applause to them and I would like to thank these two guys for putting up with our super late submission. We didn't start in January. But they still got us out there. So thanks a lot guys. Hey, hey. So yeah, black bag for those who don't know is a sort of lock picking and penetration game. You got to break into a virtual office. You got to pick a bunch of locks while you're in there. There's getting data. There's a lot of dick pics. It's my kind of contest. And this is the last year I'm ever running it because there's not enough throughput. Defcon is so big you can only run so many teams and we're going to do something better and bigger and faster. But this year, sex luck from Salt Lake City, Utah, topped it out. Yellow 37 and CROV did great. Just barely getting ahead of surprise butt plugs. But a lot of these people, and I encourage you, if any of you are contest organizers, do this shit. For our scoring, we give a 10 percent point bump off the top of the score for anyone who participates in charity stuff. So if you bomb in and you're like, hey, I just got a mohawk or I just gave blood, like bang score score like it's going up. But I let people do that until the end of the contest. So there's a whole team that's like watching their score and then they jump to second and then they run over and all give blood and they come back with bandages. They're like, boom, give us bonuses. So yeah, sex luck crushed it because they all gave blood. Three, two guys got mohawks. They did like be the match and fusion between the contest and events is awesome. So try to do that and come to the Defcon shoot next year because we blow shit up in the desert. Thank you. All right. Next up, coin droids. And Schemaverse. So coin droids is a robot battle game, but played entirely through Defcoin. So you battle each other by sending transactions at each other, trying to steal each other's money, et cetera, et cetera. This year, oh, I have notes. We had 240 players, which was ridiculous. 88,000 attacks took place with a lot of Defcoin. We had two different battles. One was King of the Hill and that was won by Freak. That got a little intense for a couple of people. And the other battle, which was the boss battle, I agree. The best thing to do with our contest is to kind of integrate with a bunch of them. So we had bosses all over the place and someone managed to find three of them and that was Moon Doggy. That was pretty much it. CoinDroids.com runs all year round though, so you can still keep playing. Schemaverse is a space battle game written inside a Postgres database. So SelectStar for My Ships, Insert into My Ships, Drop Bobby Tables, et cetera, it's all there. In this year, we had 71 trillion tuples returned for those database nerds in the room. That's 2.5 million actions and no one hacked it this year, so that was kind of boring, thanks guys. But our prize this year was a Schemaverse Cup, which was actually created by a core developer of Postgres for this competition. So I'd like to welcome Sysfix quickly, run on stage for being a champion this year. Crack me if you can, in here, in here, yes, boom, oh you're right there. Yeah, literally sitting right there. Crack me if you can as the password cracking contest for sixth year. So this year TeamHashcat pretty much destroyed all the other pro teams. It's the first time we've had a back-to-back winner, so they were out for blood and they did it. They get $600 assuming they do a write-up describing everything they did and release updates to all their tools and we require all the pro teams to do that in order to get paid. So in a week or two, there will be new betas of John the Ripper and Hashcat and everything that's out there for everybody. Just real quick, the big trick this year was it's all UTF-8. So none of it was in English, it was Japanese, it was Mandarin, it was all these other things and so most of the updates is going to be updated for UTF support in the majority of the tools. And that's it. Thank you. I see you, there you go. I have a bit of glory, guys. Dark Net Project is an interactive puzzle contest based on Daniel Suarez's book, Demon. We put up puzzles run by an interactive jabber bot across DefCon to help people learn how to do things in other villages, other contests. We integrated with Coindroids to help people get over there. You can learn to solder, learn to crack Wi-Fi, learn how to use GPG and tour. We had three winners this year. Silk was our first place winner. Got a tremendous number of points, he also won last year. Nolan was our second place winner and Tilted Kipers, I think that's the representation. Awesome, was our third place winner and we've got prizes for you also. See me afterwards. Thank you very much. So Drunk Hector History was a new competition this year. And it was a storytelling competition with a twist. We prepared the eight contestants with five liters of vodka, a liter of bourbon and a half a liter of rum. And they got in stage and got five minutes to tell a story. And so what ended up on, what was on paper sounded like a really good idea. Ended up being a shit show of epic proportions. So we have some prizes. Jack Daniel, we actually don't have his prize because one of the contestants stole it. And then Tyro, if you're here, we have a flask for you. And then the first place winner was Katie. And here's Katie. Here's Katie's prize. EFF badge hacking, anybody? Anybody? Anybody? Anybody? Is that Eric? He's coming. He's coming. We're all judging your stride like he could be a lot more effective if you just shorten that up a little bit. Take that advice to heart. Thanks. This is the first year we did the badge hacking pageant. Thanks to judges Joe Grand, Lost and Zazz. We saw lots of participation for a first year thing. So the digital winner was a loather with a DC 22 badge. He made a quadcopter out of it. He did two flights. The first flight came back around and clipped him in the calf. Saw a lot of a lot of actually a surprising amount of blood there so great thing that he won that. For the analog winner was Rainbow Unicorns Bite with a knit koozie around this year's human badge. It kind of looked like a tire was pretty sick. And for the wild card badge was Mike and Mikey with amazingly detailed counterfeit uber badges which they used to get in a defcon this year I think. So thanks everyone. We'll be back and better again next week. At the end you can delete this in a cheer but Hacker Jabber the oldest contest at Defcon 21 years running this year is won by Win Job. Their third consecutive victory beating Leetmeet, Affin Mord and we fucked it up who actually went all or nothing and bellowed out in the finals in the middle of the game. That wasn't too bright. Jeff Moss, guest speaker, Win Schwartel came on and played well Win Schwartel was a contestant and so it did really well. My understanding is we had a couple first. We went through our first streaker mail unfortunately so maybe next year we'll do better. For least for the guys. Ladies I hope you enjoyed the show. 140 beers so we're definitely doing our best we can to drive up the cost of Defcon. And so the ref will now lead us in a prayer. Fuck it up! Don't fuck it up! Until next year! Amen. We still got a couple of shirts left. Come see me afterwards if you want to hack a Japanese shirt. Thank you. Robo calls. There they are. Okay so amazingly the FTC last year did a robo call honey pot building contest and more amazingly this year they decided to come back. I was one of the judges. Everybody hates robo calls. It's like the safest thing in the world to be against and if you tell people you're working on a contest against robo calls everybody says yeah that's great so this was a lot of fun. We had two finalists this year competing for these incredibly valuable trophies that will be very easy to fit into an overhead bin. Our best in and also if they're declared official winners but through the federal bureaucracy substantial cash prizes. So our best in show was team robo killer which did an amazing amount of work are they here. And our first our first runner-up was Hemat Sanger. You're here come on up and claim you're very easy to fit in an overhead bin trophy. So he said that's next year's badges. Intel CTF. You're dead to us. Network forensics. So we come from the small town of Missoula Montana every year and we put on the network forensics puzzle contest. What it is it's a bunch of p-caps that we put together showing different things through the networks with the TCP IP protocol. It went all the way until very late slash early in the morning I guess yesterday. So we have threat level pancakes that came in first they want to fit its surge. Second place was just one man Tom Pohl wherever he is he's the best. And then third is blue squirrel who and they finished a couple hours after Tom Pohl so congratulations guys are awesome and anything from a DEF come for them? No? Yeah I did. Maybe? Fine. Open CTF we're yet. Oh look there's Pyro. We were looking for you before. Oh they're going to main. All right. Tamper evident. We are powering through. Also dead to us. These guys are gone right? Oh no the secure ninja cyber range. Cool. Apparently there are prizes. So for secure ninja cyber range Maximus Blackboard came in first with I'm not what is that? Zensen he and Gabriel Lawrence we have prizes up here for you guys they had to take off so if you are in here head on up. No? We're keeping this shit. Come find me later for smoothies. I'm not shitting you look it's a ninja thing. Come find us in the DC801 penthouse. Warlock games. Oh actually they're got their main stage as well. All right so now we'll get into just some of the cool stuff so be the match had 126 sign ups this year which is awesome. I love that that's still going. Is somebody here from that? Do you know? Want to say anything? Yeah. Yeah there were 20,000 people here and 126 signed up. Yeah I guess that's whoops. So blood code 84 blood donations made this year. So thanks to Deviant for probably getting half of those. Yeah it might be all of them. Man those guys look wrecked in there too like somebody came over and they're like holy shit. Like is that like the medical area? Like people are just freaking passing out at DevCon? They was like no man they're donating blood. I thought that was like where you went when you got hurt. Yeah I was like oh it's cool. Ham radio exams. You hear? Awesome. You guys can talk about it. So DC408 took their hand at running Ham radio exams for the first time this year. Thank you to all our volunteers. Everyone who came out and took a test gave a shot. Not everybody passed but it's great to see the enthusiasm. Hope you study and try again somewhere else. There are dice that we gave away to everyone who passed. If you didn't get yours or maybe if you're just a ham and you can come find me you can have one. So as you can see we had 124 exams taken this year. 65 of those were the technician class which is your basic entry level. Gets you started in it. You can start transmitting as soon as your name and call sign show up in the FCC database. There were 11 people who upgraded from technician up to the general class. 9 people who went up to their amateur extra which is the highest class that you can achieve. We also had a couple people who let's see the actual number for people who tried to do two tests at once was 42. One person attempted to do all three however they fell short on the last test but they will be back. That's the stats I have. Thank you all. If you're interested in your ham radio license we'll have information posted on the forums as well as being back next year. Thank you. Mohawks. There she is. Hello I'm Ed. That's Lexi. We do this whole Mohawk con thing. I see a good amount of Mohawks out there but of course never enough. This year let's see we have new numbers. Let me pull those up because when I sent in the information at noon like I was supposed to we were still cutting heads and getting like huge amounts of more even more donations so. Cutting heads. Yes. Haven't you seen all the blood running around? You know the medical bay? All right. Final total for the EFF was $2,575. For hackers for charity $1,049. The Denhack box donation box raised $67 just printing out stickers that was only here for like a day and a half and it got $67. And we shaved a total of 153 heads. And so this year grand total raised $3,691 for charity. IOT village. We didn't do anything nice for charity so that sucks for us but good for them. This is the first year of the Internet of Things Village and as you can see. First year. Come on. New contest based off our so hopelessly broken challenge. The zero-day track we found 25 new vulnerabilities and just learned that our smart fridge was man in the middle. Their email that just happened so don't get a smart fridge. Going over the scoring and stuff so if you participated in that track we're going to reach out to you via email and get you your prizes. Our capture the flag contest we have team first place was froggy style. Second was ad hoc. Froggy style where are you? Of one wolf or something that I can't see down there because I'm short. One man wolf. We are going to be given over $5,000 in cash prizes so we'll be in touch with the winners. Thanks for having us this year guys. It was a lot of fun. It's good to be here. I'm going to waste as much time as possible. So wireless villages this year we had a whole bunch of contest events but we mostly rebuilt the entire capture the flag game. We built an entire fake town including a nuclear power plant, hospital transmitting, broken pox ag as well as all the standard Wi-Fi stuff. So it was really a lot of fun. We had 15 teams with 10 tables so it got a little tight and competitive. We had three winners of raging poners been here. They got almost half the flags on the board so they're as awesome as it gets. You guys better try harder next year. We also had root acquired and last place. Last place did quite a bit better than last place as it was but good for them. We gave away about $5,000 in high-end radio gear to the winners so I want to thank Blackphone Guys Silent Circle as well as HackerF, Hacker Warehouse, Nuon for donating so much really expensive gear and no starch press and hack five for giving away a whole bunch of gear for us. I'd also like to say that this has been, I don't even know how many years of the wireless village but our fearless leader, our father, our grandfather, Takahuna, has been working on this village since Defcon 15 and he's been running the village since three years ago I suppose. Yeah, five years ago. He's been running the village for five years. I'm not even old enough to stand here but somehow he has decided that the rest of us losers can probably hack it on our own and he told us after all this time he's going to retire and make us do all the work so a big round of applause for the man who's been running this forever. Thanks everybody. And I am leaving it in some very young and capable hands. All right we stomped a mud hole in that so thanks everybody again the main closing ceremonies will take place over on the paris side of the house so if you're interested head on over that way so thanks and we'll see you next year. Also if you're interested in running a contest or event next year hit us up you can reach me at grifter at defconn.org seriously we want to see cool shit make it happen