Hacker tournament brings together world's best in Las Vegas
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[August 18, 2022] By
Zeba Siddiqui
LAS VEGAS (Reuters) -A team of hackers from
two North American universities won the "Capture the Flag" championship,
a contest seen as the "Olympics of hacking," which draws together some
of the world's best in the field.
In the carpeted ballroom of one of the largest casinos in Las Vegas, the
few dozen hackers competing in the challenge sat hunched over laptops
from Friday through Sunday during the DEF CON security conference that
hosts the event.
The winning team, called Maple Mallard Magistrates, included
participants from Carnegie Mellon University, its alumni, and the
University of British Columbia.
The contest involves breaking into custom-built software designed by the
tournament organizers. Participants must not only find bugs in the
program but also defend themselves from hacks coming from other
competitors.
The hackers, mostly young men and women, included visitors from China,
India, Taiwan, Japan and South Korea. Some worked for their respective
governments, some for private firms and others were college students.
While their countries may be engaged in cyber espionage against one
another, the DEF CON CTF contest allows elite hackers to come together
in the spirit of sport.
The reward is not money, but prestige. "No other competition has the
clout of this one," said Giovanni Vigna, a participant who teaches at
the University of California in Santa Barbara. "And everybody leaves
politics at home."
“You will easily find a participant here going to another who may be
from a so-called enemy nation to say 'you did an amazing job, an
incredible hack.'"
The game has taken on new meaning in recent years as cybersecurity has
been elevated as a national security priority by the United States, its
allies and rivals. Over the last 10 years, the cybersecurity industry
has boomed in value as hacking technology has evolved.
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Participants of the Capture the Flag (CTF)
contest at DEF CON hacking conference collaborate remotely with
their teammates during the contest, in Las Vegas, Nevada, U.S., in
this handout image obtained by Reuters on August 17, 2022. Zachary
Wade/Handout via REUTERS
Winning the title is a lifelong badge of honor, said Aaditya Purani, a
participant who works as an engineer at electric car maker Tesla Inc.
This year's contest was broadcast for the first time on YouTube, with
accompanying live commentary in the style of televised sports.
DEF CON itself, which began as a meetup of a few hundred hackers in the late
1990s, was organized across four casinos this year and drew a crowd of more than
30,000, according to organizing staff.
On Saturday afternoon, participants at the "Capture the Flag" contest sat typing
into their laptops as conference attendees streamed in and out of the room to
watch. Some participants took their meals at the tables, munching on hamburgers
and fries with their eyes fixed on screens.
Seungbeom Han, a systems engineer at Samsung Electronics, who was part of a
South Korean team, said it was his first time at the contest and it had been an
honor to qualify.
The competition was intense and sitting for eight hours a day at the chairs was
not easy. They did take bathroom breaks, he said with a laugh, "but they are a
waste of time."
(Reporting by Zeba Siddiqui in Las VegasEditing by Matthew Lewis)
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