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May 6, 2024

Slashdot: NSA Launches ‘Codebreaker Challenge’ For Students: Stopping an Infrastructure Attack

NSA Launches ‘Codebreaker Challenge’ For Students: Stopping an Infrastructure Attack
Published on September 16, 2017 at 04:02PM
Slashdot reader eatvegetables writes:
The U.S. National Security Agency launched Codebreaker Challenge 2017 Friday night (Sept 15) at 9 p.m. EST. It started off as a reverse-engineering challenge a few years ago but has grown in scope to include network analysis, reverse-engineering, and vulnerability discovery/exploitation.
This year’s challenge story centers around hackers attacking critical “supervisory control and data acquisition” (SCADA) infrastructure. Your mission, should you choose to accept it, is to figure out how the SCADA network is being attacked, find the attack vector(s), and stop the bad guy(s)/gal(s)/other(s).

Codebreaker-Challenge is unusual for capture-the-flag(ish) contests due to the scope/number of challenges and how long the contest runs (now until end of year). Also (this year, at least), the challenge is built around a less than well-known networking protocol, MQTT. It’s open to anyone with a school.edu email address. A site leader-board shows which school/University has the most l33t students. Carnegie Mellon and Georgia Institute of Tech are at the top of the leader-board as of Saturday morning.

Last year, 3,300 students (from 481 schools) participated, with 15 completing all six tasks. One Carnegie Mellon student finished in less than 18 hours.
A resources page offers “information on reverse engineering,” and the NSA says the first 50 students who complete all the tasks ths year will receive a “small token” of appreciation from the agency.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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