Vegas To Host Next U.S. Cyber Challenge 'NetWars'
Multilevel, multidisciplinary hacking competition simulates real-world attacks, attackers
More than 100 security professionals next month will compete in a two-day cybersecurity competition that simulates real-world attackers and attacks.
The SANS NetWars contest -- part of the U.S. Cyber Challenge program -- will be held as part of the SANS Network Security 2011 conference at Caesars Palace in Las Vegas. The contest is for both new and seasoned hackers.
Capture-the-flag (CTF) type hacking contests are nothing new in cybersecurity. What makes NetWars different than say, DefCon's CTF, is that it's aimed at all levels of hacking skills and all competitors have to begin at level one of the contest, says Ed Skoudis, director of NetWars for SANS. The more advanced players can then quickly advance to higher levels -- up to level four, then five, where the participant gets access to a system at the root level, he says. "Level five is for people who really know their stuff. There's castle-on-castle combat," Skoudis says.
"DefCon is a big-team CTF focused on binary analysis and exploit development. That's cool and a fantastic skill," Skoudis says. "That's not what NetWars is focused on. Ours includes this, too, but it's multilevel and multidisciplinary."
While other hacking contests are either targeted at newbies or "grand masters," he says, NetWars runs the gamut of security expertise.
Skoudis says the competition includes events that security pros could encounter in their everyday jobs. "We spent a lot of time making sure every challenge is real-world," he says. "We want to make sure they are using their analytical skills to solve them, and it's not just dumb luck."
Competitors test their analysis, defensive, and offensive skills by fighting off attackers and taking over targeted systems and networks. Among the skills they have to employ at various levels are digital forensics, packet and malware analysis, vulnerability testing, and penetration testing.