From 21 to 24 September in Phoenix, Arizona, LABScon will bring together world-renowned researchers in the field of cybersecurity to share the latest innovations
SentinelOne, provider of an autonomous cybersecurity platform, announced the first edition of LABScon. A series of conferences dedicated to advancing cybersecurity research for the benefit of collective digital defense will take place for the first time from September 21-24, 2022 in Phoenix, Arizona. The conference is by invitation, while researchers are asked to submit their unpublished contributions through the conference website.
“We are excited to introduce LABScon as the premier venue for advanced security research, collaboration and community development,” said Migo Kedem, Head of SentinelLabs and VP Growth at SentinelOne. "SentinelLabs was created to leverage our unique security perspective, and we have developed a platform to bring together and advance the cybersecurity community. We welcome researchers from all geographies, vendors, organizations and government agencies to collaborate together. As the threat landscape evolves, the insights shared by the research community are critical to securing our digital future."
The LABScon committee includes distinguished researchers and cybersecurity experts from Google, Netflix, Johns Hopkins University, DEFCON, SentinelLabs, and more.
LABScon will be organized by SentinelLabs, a world-class team of security researchers identifying critical vulnerabilities, new attack vectors, malware strains, and threat actors. SentinelLabs' top research from the past three months includes multiple CVSS 10.0 vulnerability in Microsoft Azure Defender for IoT, a new wiper malware”AcidRain“deployed against satellite modems in Ukraine and a nation-state threat actor”ModifiedElephant” which uses malware to incriminate and arrest activists.
Applications to participate in LABScon are open until 8.59pm on 30 June 2022 and available at this link . Access to LABScon is by invitation only, you can request a invitation to this link.






