Speakers

The people who've shared their work.

Every MEMSEC talk is given by a community member. Here's everyone who's presented — most talks first — and the topics they've covered.

Archive

Past speakers

7 speakers across 35 meetups. Want to present? Reach out.

null0perat0r

Security engineer, pen tester & developer

Memphis, TN

5 talks

Memphis-based security engineer, penetration tester, full-stack developer, and musician — featured speaker at DEFCON 32. MEMSEC regular covering web app security, Burp Suite tooling, and local LLMs.

  • Running Local LLMs: Private, Offline AI
  • Web App Security with OWASP ZAP
  • Burp Suite: An Essential Toolkit Introduction
  • Inside the Pen Testing Process with Faction
  • MitM Mobile Apps with NoPE Proxy

Bhargab

Hardware security researcher

2 talks

Hardware and embedded-systems security researcher. Walks the community through Bluetooth attacks, firmware analysis, and hardware reverse engineering.

  • Hardware Reverse Engineering 101 Meetup →
  • Live Bluetooth Impersonation Attack

HackerMane

MEMSEC organizer

Memphis, TN

2 talks

Founder and organizer of MEMSEC. Talks have covered USB attacks (Rubber Ducky / OMG) and Flipper Zero firmware.

  • Introductory USB Attacks: Rubber Ducky & OMG
  • Flipper Zero: Building & Flashing Firmware

John Dorion

Reproducible infrastructure & Nix

1 talk

Practical introductions to building reproducible cybersecurity labs and environments with Nix and NixOS.

  • Reproducible Cybersecurity Labs with Nix & NixOS

Ostrich Lab

CTF organizers

1 talk

Build custom CTF challenges for the community, including The Secret Farm.

  • CTF: The Secret Farm (Ostrich Lab)

Saeed Fazal

DevSecOps & software supply chain security

1 talk

Focuses on SBOM and DevSecOps practices that give teams visibility and control over their software supply chain.

  • Software Supply Chain Security with SBOM & DevSecOps Meetup →

Squirrel

Security fundamentals

1 talk

Community speaker on the unglamorous-but-essential fundamentals of cybersecurity.

  • Boring Things Are Still Important in Cybersecurity