Chaos Communication Congress
The Chaos Communication Congress is a multi-day meeting of the international hacker scene that takes place in Germany and is hosted and organized by the Chaos Computer Club (CCC). The congress is devoted to technical and socio-political topics in numerous lectures and workshops. Since 2015, interest has exceeded the number of tickets available, which was 17,000 in 2018 and 2019 and sold out online within seconds.
The congress takes place annually, from the foundation in 1984 to 2004 from December 27th to 29th, since 2005 from December 27th to 30th. The consecutive number of the event is used as an abbreviation, supplemented by the addition C3 (for "Chaos Communication Congress", details see below).
story
After the congress, which had been taking place in the Eidelstedter Bürgerhaus in Hamburg since 1984 , had become too big for this place, it moved to Berlin in 1998 to the Haus am Köllnischer Park , where it was attended by more than 4,000 participants. From 2003 to 2011 the congress took place in the Berlin Congress Center on Alexanderplatz . In 2012 it was moved to the Congress Centrum Hamburg (CCH). In December 2013 it was visited by over 9,000 participants. The increased interest was attributed to the global surveillance and espionage affair and the publications of Edward Snowden . In 2017 the congress moved to the Leipziger Messe because the CCH was no longer available due to renovation work.
The congress tries to keep entry prices as low as possible - especially to enable young people to participate. In 2011 a ticket cost 80 euros for the entire duration of the congress and 25 euros for young people under 18 years of age. A large number of the speakers are recruited from the scene itself, and the organizational work on site is carried out by voluntary helpers, who are referred to as angels in CCC jargon.
Part of the congress is the Hackcenter , a large area in which the various regional groups of the club are present with their technology at the congress. The hack center and the other areas of the event are connected to the Internet via a broadband connection. However, the CCC attaches importance to the fact that the Hackcenter is not a LAN party , but a "hands-on" laboratory for joint research and testing of network technology. With the move to the Congress Centrum Hamburg in 2012, the hack center was expanded to include so-called assemblies , delimited areas outside the lecture halls that could serve as presentation space for various social groups and projects.
From 1997 to 2004, the German Lockpicking Championship was held at the same time as the congress .
The streaming of the lectures has been carried out in recent years by the research community electronic media e. V. (FeM) implemented. Due to the high demand, the 1 Gbit / s connection of the TU Ilmenau was 99 percent full in 2007 and 2008 . When the Chaos Communication Congress moved to Hamburg (29C3), the computer resources and bandwidth of other student networks in Germany could be used. There was also support from the CCC environment. In the following year, the Video Operation Center (VOC) was set up within the CCC, which was supported. The VOC has been in charge since 31C3 and is supported by FeM and ags ( TU Braunschweig ).
Instead of a Creative Commons - by-nc-nd license for 32C3 videos, most 33C3 videos were published with a CC-by license.
Incidents in the vicinity of the 26C3
As part of the Chaos Communication Congress 2009, strangers probably illegally gained access to internal data on the dating site Ma-flirt.de, and publicly accessible profile photos were also downloaded from the dating site Harzflirt.de. Download links for this data were created in the CCC's congress wiki. Passwords were published there directly. An older hack into the customer database of the clothing retailer Thor Steinar was also disclosed. The published data included profile names, passwords, email addresses, location details, home addresses, photos and sales figures. Two of the sides have a reputation for being frequented by members of the right-wing scene , the other not. The association did not want to comment on the data protection violations. Congress participants, however, distanced themselves from the incident. It is contrary to the hacker ethic .
Remote Chaos Experience (rC3)
Due to the COVID-19 pandemic , the 37C3, which was to take place again at the Leipzig Exhibition Center, was canceled. The congress was broadcast on a streaming platform from numerous stages across Germany. In order to imitate a “congress environment” for the participants, a 2D world was made available through which lectures could be attended and a video conference was automatically started with the participants standing around.
Congress mottos and venues from 1984 to the present day
The Chaos Communication Congress has a motto almost every year, mostly related to important topics of the past or coming year.
No. | year | motto | Abbreviation | Visitor | Venue |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 1984 | CCC'84 after Orion'64 | Eidelstedt community center in Hamburg | ||
2 | 1985 | You may | |||
3 | 1986 | So that you can still add powerful bytes tomorrow | |||
4th | 1987 | Open networks - now! | |||
5 | 1988 | I think it chops | |||
6th | 1989 | Open borders: Cocomed in abundance | |||
7th | 1990 | without a motto | |||
8th | 1991 | Hitchhiking the networks | |||
9 | 1992 | There's something in the air | |||
10 | 1993 | Ten years after Orwell | |||
11th | 1994 | Internet in the nursery - Big business is watching you ?! | Bikini house in Berlin | ||
12th | 1995 | Pretty Good Piracy - converted and sold | Eidelstedt community center in Hamburg | ||
13th | 1996 | The futurological congress - life after the internet depression | |||
14th | 1997 | Nothing is true. Everything is allowed. | |||
15th | 1998 | All rights reversed | 2,300 | House at Köllnischen Park in Berlin | |
16 | 1999 | without a motto | 16C3 | ||
17th | 2000 | Explicit Lyrics | 17C3 | 2,500 | |
18th | 2001 | Hacking Is Not A Crime | 18C3 | 2,500 | |
19th | 2002 | Out of order | 19C3 | 3,000 | |
20th | 2003 | Not A Number | NaN | 2,500 | Berlin Congress Center |
21 | 2004 | The Usual Suspects | 21C3 | 3,500 | |
22nd | 2005 | Private Investigations | 22C3 | 3,000 | |
23 | 2006 | Who can you trust? | 23C3 | 4,200 | |
24 | 2007 | Full steam ahead! | 24C3 | 4.013 | |
25th | 2008 | Nothing To Hide! | 25C3 | 4,200 (including day tickets) | |
26th | 2009 | Here Be Dragons | 26C3 | 9,000 (including streaming) | |
27 | 2010 | We come in peace | 27C3 | 4,000 | |
28 | 2011 | Behind enemy lines | 28C3 | 3,000 | |
29 | 2012 | Not My Department | 29C3 | 6,500 | Congress Center Hamburg |
30th | 2013 | without a motto | 30C3 | 9,000 | |
31 | 2014 | A New Dawn | 31C3 | 12,000 | |
32 | 2015 | Gated communities | 32C3 | 13,000 (sold out) | |
33 | 2016 | Works For Me | 33C3 | 12,000 (sold out) | |
34 | 2017 | tuwat | 34C3 | 15,000 (sold out) | Leipzig Fair |
35 | 2018 | Refreshing memories | 35C3 | 17,000 (sold out) | |
36 | 2019 | Resource exhaustion | 36C3 | 17,000 (sold out) | |
37 | 2020 | remote chaos experience | rC3 | - | On-line |
38 | 2021 | NOWHERE | rC3 2021 | - | On-line |
shortcut
Since the Chaos Communication Congress in 1999, an abbreviation has become common. The term 16C3 was used instead of the 16th Chaos Communication Congress . The official spelling of the Chaos Communication Congress 2004 is therefore "21C3: The Usual Suspects" 21st Chaos Communication Congress . The 20th congress in 2003, on the other hand, formed a fitting name for the motto with the abbreviation NaN .
"Silk Road" - pipe-post -station of 30c3
See also
Web links
- List of all C3 with associated websites
- Recordings of the lectures since 2000 on media.ccc.de
- media.ccc.de on YouTube
Individual evidence
- ↑ a b 35c3 in Leipzig “Be good hackers!” Retrieved on January 9, 2019 .
- ↑ Manuel Atug: 36C3: On network politics and climate change - interfering instead of standing still Article from February 9, 2020 on the website heise.de . Retrieved April 28, 2021.
- ↑ 36C3: Tickets & Presale Article from October 19, 2019 on the events.ccc.de website . Retrieved April 28, 2021.
- ↑ Why did you move the CCCongress to Hamburg (of all places)? In: CCC Event Weblog. August 8, 2012, accessed October 4, 2012 .
- ↑ Stefan Krempl : 30C3: Snowden effect brings record attendance at hacker meetings. In: Heise online . December 31, 2013, accessed November 3, 2015 .
- ↑ CCC | Chaos Communication Congress moves to Leipzig. Retrieved January 1, 2018 .
- ↑ Tickets - 28C3. In: Event page for the 28C3. CCC, 2011, accessed October 4, 2012 .
- ↑ Assemblies. In: CCC Event Blog. Retrieved January 15, 2013 .
- ^ Sway, Felix von Leitner : FeM streaming and encoding. December 30, 2007, accessed June 8, 2016 .
- ^ Andreas Dommaschk: FeM at the 25th Chaos Communication Congress II. Research Association for Electronic Media , December 30, 2008, accessed on September 27, 2010 .
- ↑ Annual report 2012. (PDF) Research Association for Electronic Media, January 9, 2013, pp. 9–10 , accessed on December 21, 2015 .
- ↑ Annual report 2013. (PDF) Research Association for Electronic Media, January 19, 2014, pp. 9–10 , accessed on December 21, 2015 .
- ↑ Annual report 2014. (PDF) Research Association for Electronic Media, January 13, 2015, pp. 7–8 , accessed on December 21, 2015 .
- ↑ Call for Participation: 33rd Chaos Communication Congress. packetstormsecurity.com, September 2, 2016, accessed January 4, 2017 .
- ↑ Stefan Krempl : 26C3: Hackers use record bandwidth. In: Heise online . December 31, 2009, accessed November 3, 2015 .
- ↑ Stefan Krempl : 26C3: Flirting exchange of the right scene hacked. In: Heise online . December 29, 2009, accessed December 31, 2009 .
- ↑ Christian Klaß: Right-wing flirt market and NPD websites hacked. User data published by hackers for download. In: golem.de . December 30, 2009, accessed December 31, 2009 .
- ↑ Luise Strothmann: Hackers out Thor Steinar fans. In: taz . January 2, 2010, accessed November 2, 2015 .
- ↑ a b c rC3 - remote Chaos Experience - CCC Event Blog. Retrieved September 5, 2020 .
- ↑ Mirco Blitz: C3-HdK: History Part 1. Interview with Tim Pritlove at 42:24 . In: Mission consciousness. Retrieved December 6, 2017 .
- ↑ Stefan Krempl : Berlin is becoming the capital of chaos again. In: Telepolis . Retrieved December 27, 2018 .
- ^ Stefan Krempl , Torsten Kleinz: Chaos Nights: The 18th CCC Congress in Berlin. In: Heise online . Retrieved December 27, 2018 .
- ↑ Stefan Krempl : 19C3: radio silence on "Abuse" phone. In: Heise online . December 31, 2002, accessed November 2, 2015 .
- ↑ Till Meyer: Preventing data misuse. In: Junge Welt . December 31, 2003, accessed November 3, 2015 .
- ↑ Stefan Krempl : 21C3 : Hacker meeting ends with record attendance. (No longer available online.) In: Heise online . December 31, 2004, archived from the original on December 22, 2015 ; accessed on November 2, 2015 .
- ↑ Stefan Krempl : 22C3: The hackers say goodbye to Robin Hood heroism. In: Heise online . December 31, 2005, accessed November 2, 2015 .
- ↑ Stefan Krempl : 23C3: Hackertreffen closes with a new visitor record. In: Heise online . December 31, 2006, accessed November 2, 2015 .
- ↑ Stefan Krempl : 24C3: More Activism 2008. In: Heise online . December 31, 2007, accessed November 2, 2015 .
- ↑ a b 26C3: visitor and bandwidth record 2009. In: WinFuture.de
- ^ Frank Rieger , Ron: 26C3 Closing Event. December 30, 2009, accessed July 22, 2020 .
- ↑ Falk Hedemann: 27C3: Hackers criticize attacks on PayPal, Mastercard & Co. In: t3n . December 28, 2010, accessed November 2, 2015 .
- ↑ Jakob Steinschaden: Among hackers: It's seething underground. In: futurezone . December 30, 2011, accessed January 14, 2015 .
- ↑ Stefan Krempl: 29C3: CCC sees the move to the Hamburg congress center as a complete success. In: Heise online . December 31, 2012, accessed January 6, 2015 .
- ↑ Stefan Krempl : 30C3: Snowden effect brings record attendance at hacker meetings. In: Heise online . December 31, 2013, accessed April 15, 2015 .
- ↑ Hakan Tanriverdi: Reason for a good mood. In: Süddeutsche Zeitung . December 27, 2014, accessed December 27, 2014 .
- ↑ Ute Welty : Hacker Congress 31C3: With expertise against surveillance. Deutschlandfunk Kultur , December 30, 2014, accessed on January 6, 2015 .
- ↑ 32C3: Gated Communities. CCC Event Weblog, November 4, 2015, accessed November 4, 2015 .
- ↑ Stefan Krempl: 32C3: Hacker meeting with 13,000 participants plagued by DDoS attacks. In: Heise online . December 31, 2015 . Retrieved May 14, 2017.
- ↑ Hello, this is 33C3 “works for me”. CCC Event Weblog, November 22, 2016, accessed November 23, 2016 .
- ↑ Torsten Kleinz: 33C3: CCC Congress begins in Hamburg. In: Heise online . December 27, 2016 . Retrieved May 14, 2017.
- ↑ 34C3: tuwat. CCC Event Weblog, November 23, 2017, accessed November 23, 2017 .
- ^ Nico Jurran: Hacker Congress ends: Broader program, more visitors. In: Heise online . December 30, 2017 . Retrieved December 30, 2017.
- ↑ Erdgeist: Chaos Communication Congress moves to Leipzig. Chaos Computer Club, May 13, 2017, accessed May 13, 2017 .
- ↑ CCC Updates: Chaos Communication Congress again in Leipzig. Chaos Computer Club, September 1, 2018, accessed September 3, 2018 .
- ↑ Current status for the 37C3. Chaos Computer Club, June 6, 2020, accessed June 8, 2020 .
- ↑ CCC | Advance booking for the 35th Chaos Communication Congress starts. Retrieved November 5, 2018 .
- ↑ CCC | Invitation to participate: Chaos Communication Congress in Leipzig. Retrieved October 4, 2019 .
- ↑ 36C3: Hacker Congress produces more than 11 tons of CO2. Retrieved December 27, 2019 .
- ↑ a b rC3: NOWHERE (2021) - CCC Event Blog. Retrieved December 19, 2021 .