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Challenges of Setting Up a Security Conference

Orome1 writes "The founder of the SecurityByte conference talks about his motivations for organizing such an event in his native country and what he hopes it will achieve. He shares knowledge regarding the differences between the organization processes involved when setting up this type of event in India as opposed to North America, which he says have a lot to do with the fact that there is lack of awareness about security in India, and that the majority of such events held there are mostly vendor-driven and free for visitors."

8 of 29 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Transcript anyone? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

    I'm running Linux, so no speakers for me.

  2. Re:Transcript anyone? by Yvanhoe · · Score: 2

    English is not my native language, Indian is very hard to understand. Transcripts should be the norm

    --
    The Wise adapts himself to the world. The Fool adapts the world to himself. Therefore, all progress depends on the Fool.
  3. Just my two cents... by abednegoyulo · · Score: 5, Insightful

    In the third world country where I live in, vendor-driven and free events usually have their marketing guys do all the talking. This means biased information. On the other hand, paid events are the ones that have real knowledgeable guys in it. Unfotunately we rarely have such events since the price to have a very knowledgeable speaker in it is very high and only few people will certainly attend. The price is usually higher than an average sysadmins or developers salary (not employed in the top 100 companies in the country or converted 650USD a month). Affordable events do happen but in my experience there is always this one guy in the crowd that is more knowledgeable than the speaker (asks more indepth questions, disagreeing with the facts of the speaker with much more citations, etc.). The best option over here is just to find free webinars of past notable events. Of course you don't get to ask questions but the knowledge that is gained is priceless.

    1. Re:Just my two cents... by dkf · · Score: 4, Funny

      In the third world country where I live in, vendor-driven and free events usually have their marketing guys do all the talking. This means biased information. On the other hand, paid events are the ones that have real knowledgeable guys in it.

      That's very often the case in the rest of the world too. The best events tend to be the ones that attract people who are professionally in the field, and yet where the sponsors are restricted/absent. That means they're usually held during the working week in substantial hotels in cities and so tend to cost a lot (hotels charging what they do, and not much sponsor money to bear the cost). Yes, this is hard but its just how it works; getting the people that make it really worth it just tends to push costs up, and many conferences are run on a razor edge in terms of costs, with even a small error in terms of income estimation — attendance really — leading to ruin or high profitability. (I'm on the committee for a small conference, but thankfully don't have to deal with the financial side.)

      --
      "Little does he know, but there is no 'I' in 'Idiot'!"
  4. Re:Transcript anyone? by cyssero · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Indian would be very hard to understand, considering it doesn't exist.

  5. Re:Just my two cents...but wait... by 1s44c · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Just bacause things are messed up in one place does not mean they are not more messed up in another place.

    Have you ever been to India? I have, despite what Indians like to tell people it's very much a third world country with open sewers, piles of rubbish, and rats all over the place. It's hard to believe that they would have any great interest in computer security given the other problems they have.

  6. Re:Just my two cents...but wait... by bogaboga · · Score: 2, Informative

    I have been to Philadelphia and Detroit so trust me on this:

    If I had just fallen to earth (into these two cities) from some planet, after having heard that the the USA is #1, I would be very disappointed. Here's why:

    These two cities were just as rotten as any 3rd world city. Save for one thing, the rats. Sadly they are still rotten.

  7. Re:Just my two cents...but wait... by PerlPunk · · Score: 2

    I have been to India. I have lived there and worked there. I even ran my own business there doing digital graphic design and image processing when it was just getting started.

    As regards to India, along side the "open sewers, piles of rubbish, and rats all over the place," you will also find computer training centers all over the place. Practically every nook and corner and hole in the wall in all but the remotest villages has some sort of computer training center. And then the Indian public education system produces legions of top-notch graduates in the maths and sciences, including computer science. This despite all the "open sewers, piles of garbage and rats."

    One thing to remember is that societies are always changing, and so is Indian society. One thing Indians have that America (for example) is losing, is a reverence for education. In India it is regarded as a privilege, not a right (despite the government's best effort to make it one), and because it's regarded as a privilege (that is, you aren't entitled to it if you don't deserve it), the Indian education system produces a lot of very, very smart and talented people in the science, engineering, health care, and business sectors. America, on the other hand, is floundering in its educational initiatives and is moving in the direction of producing more lawyers and massage therapists.

    There will come a day when America will feature plenty of its own "open sewers, piles of garbage, and rats," because it is losing the very values that made it a great world power. India, on the other hand, is rediscovering those values.