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Abstract


John Matherly is an Internet cartographer, speaker and founder of Shodan, the world's first search engine for the Internet of Things. Born and raised in Switzerland, he attended the Freies Gymnasium in Zurich where he majored in business and law until he moved to the San Diego, USA at the age of 17.

There he worked at the San Diego Supercomputer Center to help manage the world's foremost protein data bank. At the same time, he was also attending the University of California San Diego's bioinformatics program, which would kindle the fascination with large data and efficient algorithms. His final project included analyzing the human genome for exon code regions and mapping them to proteins while accounting for alternative splicing. After graduating, he worked as a freelance software engineer at a variety of companies including bioinformatics work.

In 2009, his project the Shodan search engine was unveiled on Twitter and within hours the website received a lot of attention due to the unexpected discoveries that people made. Printers, webcams, power plants and more, many of them unprotected or minimally protected, were found over time and the revelations have changed the way security and privacy on the Internet is perceived. Shodan is already seeing TVs, cell phones, traffic lights, industrial controls, infrastructure plants and various home appliances pop-up in the search results. And more of these “Internet of Things” are added each day as the world is becoming more connected. The age of big data and the connected lifestyle could mean little privacy for the unaware technology consumer. Shodan is revealing the infrastructure of all the devices connected to the internet in a way never before seen or available. For the past years, he has been featured in the news on CNN Money, Bloomberg, Washington Post, Forbes and many others.

[Abstract] Learn about the technical details of crawling the Internet every day and making the information accessible to the community. John will discuss the latest developments for Shodan in terms of cutting-edge research and how to make the information accessible to a large audience.

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