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The Open Web Application Security Project (OWASP) Los Angeles Chapter is teaming up with the Orange County, San Diego, SF Bay Area, and the Inland Empire chapters to bring you the FIFTH Annual AppSec California. The event is a one of a kind experience for information security professionals, developers, and QA and testing professionals, as they gather at the beach from around the world to learn and share knowledge and experiences about secure systems and secure development methodologies.

One and Two-day training sessions on various subjects by expert trainers kick off the conference on January 28th. World renown speakers follow on days three and four.

There will be four concurrent tracks throughout the day on both January 30 and 31, addressing a variety of topics to enhance knowledge.

Wednesday, January 31 • 2:00pm - 2:50pm
Where, how, and why is SSL traffic on mobile getting intercepted? A look at ten million real-world SSL incidents

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Abstract :
Over the last two years, we've received and analyzed more than ten million SSL validation failure reports from more than a thousand of iOS and Android apps available on the Stores, and used all around the world. From mobile banking to music apps, each report was triggered because an unknown or unexpected certificate was being served to the app, preventing it from establishing a secure connection to its server via SSL/TLS.

We've analyzed each of these reports to understand what caused the SSL connection to fail, and then grouped similar failures into various classes of SSL incidents. Throughout this presentation, we will describe the analysis we've made and present our findings.

First, we will provide a high-level overview of where, how, and why SSL incidents are occurring across the world for iOS and Android users, and describe the various classes of incidents we've detected. Some of these types of incidents, such as corporate devices performing traffic inspection, are well-known and understood, although we will provide new insights into how widespread they are.

Then, we will take a closer look at a few notable incidents we detected, which have been caused by unexpected, or even suspicious actors. We will describe our investigations and what we found.

Lastly, we will provide real-world solutions on how to protect apps against traffic interception and attacks, as a mobile developer.

Speakers
avatar for Alban Diquet

Alban Diquet

Head of Engineering, Data Theorem
Alban Diquet is Head of Engineering at Data Theorem, a cloud-enabled scanning service for mobile application security and data privacy. Alban's research focuses on security protocols, data privacy, and mobile security. Alban has released several open-source security tools including... Read More →



Wednesday January 31, 2018 2:00pm - 2:50pm PST
Terrace Lounge