Monday, November 23, 2020

Speaking at Conferences, 2020 edition

As you can imagine, 2020 has been a very "different" year, for a lot of reasons, and impacts of the events of the year have extended far and wide.  One of the impacts is conference attendance, and to address this, several conferences have opted to go fully virtual. 

The Open Source Digital Forensics Conference (OSDFCon) is one such conference.  You can watch this year's conference via YouTube, or view the agenda with presentation PDFsBrian and his team (and his hair!) at BasisTech did a fantastic job of pulling together speakers and setting up the infrastructure to hold this conference completely online this year.

Speakers submitted pre-recorded presentations, and then during the time of their presentation, accessed the Discord channel set up for their talk in order to answer questions and generally interact with those viewing the presentation.

I've attended (in person) and spoken at this conference in the past, and I've thoroughly enjoyed the mix of presentations and attendees. This time around, presenting was very different, particularly given that I wasn't doing so in a room filled with people.  I tend to prefer speaking and engaging in person, as well as observing micro-expressions and using those to draw people out, as more often than not, what they're afraid to say or ask is, in reality, extremely impactful and insightful.  

In many ways, an online virtual conference is no different from an in-person event.  In both cases, you're going to have your vocal folks who overwhelm others.  A good example of this was the Discord channel for my talk; even before I logged in for the presentation, someone had already posted a comment about textbooks for DFIR courses.  I have to wonder, much like an "IRL" conference, how many folks were in the channel but were afraid to make a statement or ask a question.

Overall, I do think that the pandemic will have impacts that extend far beyond the wide-spread distribution of a vaccine.  One thought is that this is an interesting opportunity for those doing event planning to re-invent what they do, if not their industry.  Even after we move back to in-person meetings and conferences, there will still be significant value in holding virtual or hybrid events, and planning for such an event to be seamless and easy to access for the target audience will likely become an industry unto itself.

Addendum, 24 Nov: Here is the link to the video for my presentation.

Other videos:
Video for Brian's RDPiece presentation 
Asif's Investigating WSL presentation
Linux Forensics for IoT

Addendum, 27 Nov: This morning, I uploaded my slides for the OSDFCon and Group-IB CyberCrimeCon 2020 presentations.

2 comments:

Carly Vineberg said...

This is so helpful. Thank you, much needed! I love how you show your confidence within your presentation . Your training on topic of Windows versions has definitely helped me. Have found these tips to be of great guideline .

richard2020 said...

Very interesting information. It is very useful that cybersecurity is present in this type of conferences because as we all know 2020 was a year of many attacks on our privacy and security.