![]() ![]() Since then he’s been all over the place giving talks about it. You probably remember the CANtact tool he built to bring car hacking into Open Source. He’s been a writer here for a few years, but his serious engineering life is gobbling up more and more of his time - good for him! One of the “village” talks that I really enjoyed was from. If you have any ideas I’d love to hear them below, or as comments on the project page. Perhaps three hats worn by three people who involves some type of 3-part key to add different challenges to this. I’d really like to change it up next year. The top scorer used a shell script to automate logging-in with the cracked passwords and putting his name on the scoreboard. Three of these hackers talked to me, the other four were covert about their hat hacking. Last year only one person hacked the hat, this year there were 7 names on the scoreboard for a total of 22 cracked hashes. Crack any of the hashes and you can log into the hat, put your name on the scoreboard, and make the hat say anything you want. Log onto the access point and try to load any webpage and you’ll be greeted with the scoreboard shown above. Hat Hackingįor DEF CON 22 I built a hat that scrolls messages and also serves as a simple WiFi-based crypto game. A big thanks to Supplyframe, Hackaday’s parent company, for picking up the breakfast check and for making trips like this possible for the Hackaday crew. We had about thirty people roll through and many of them stayed for two hours. This was by far my favorite unofficial badge of the conference… I made a post covering all the badges I could find over the weekend. spilled all the beans about the hardware and software design of this year’s Whiskey Pirate badge. We had a great group show up and many of them brought hardware with them. Instead, we made people shake off the hangover and get out of bed in time for the 10:30am event. Usually we’d find a bar and have people congregate in the evening but there are so many parties at this conference (official and unofficial) that we didn’t want people to have to choose between them. Here’s a look back on everything that happened.įor us, the festivities closed out with a Hackaday Breakfast Meetup on Sunday morning. ![]()
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