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From YouTube: Open Research Institute at DEF CON 30
Description
Open Research Institute at DEF CON 30
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A
Hi,
this
is
open
research
institute.
This
is
our
exhibit
at
rf
village,
we're
so
happy
to
be
here
again,
it's
a
wonderful
place.
What
we
do
is
open
source,
digital
radio,
we're
a
non-profit,
so
we
solve
problems
for
space
and
terrestrial
open
source
work,
and
then
we
give
all
that
work
away
for
free.
We
do
technical
work,
so
here
behind
us
is
one
of
our
posters
from
the
poster
session,
and
this
is
about
authentication
and
authorization
for
open
source
satellites.
B
A
And
so
that's
one
of
the
things
we
do.
We
do
technical
work
to
make
it
easier
to
understand,
and
we
also
have
done
a
lot
of
regulatory
work
to
make
it
safe
for
people
to
volunteer
to
work
on
open
source
communication
satellites
because
those
are
controlled
by
the
government
under
two
sets
of
regulations,
itar
and
eir,
and
so
one
of
the
things
that
we
did
is
to
set
up
a
framework
to
make
it
easy
to
volunteer
for
that.
Okay,.
A
And
ear
there
are
two
different
sets
of
regulations:
itar
is
from
the
u.s
state
department
and
ear
is
from
the
commerce
department.
So
essentially
what
we
did
is
we
said
you
know
we
need
this
framework
to
be
useful
for
open
source
volunteers.
We
went
out
and
did
it
so
we
have
a
poster
about
that
too.
Okay,.
B
A
Get
my
own
satellite
out
well,
yeah,
usually
you
work
with
an
organization
or
a
group
or
a
company,
and
what
you
have
to
do
is
solve
a
whole
bunch
of
problems.
So
one
of
the
reasons
that
we
exist
is
because
there's
such
a
huge
variety
of
different
problems
and
we
think
that
they
should
be
solved
in
an
open
source
way.
A
B
A
In
general,
amateur
radio
amateur
satellites
have
been
funded
through
donations
or
in-kind
contributions
throughout
for
many
decades.
There's
an
amateur
satellite
that
happened
right
almost
after
sputnik.
So
this
is
something
that's
been
going
on
for
decades
and
it's
been
done
by
a
really
dedicated
wonderful
group
of
people
over
time.
So
the
answer
is
yes,
you
can
do
it
and
it's
usually
funded
by
donations
or
either
donations
from
individuals
or
from
companies.
B
A
Were
for
the
longest,
it
was
very
difficult
to
volunteer
and
to
to
do
this
in
the
open,
so
that
that
was
one
of
the
first
things
that
we
had
to
tackle
was
to
help
make
it
safe
from
a
regulatory
point
of
view
to
do
it,
because
the
vast
majority
of
satellite
work
is
done
under
closed
or
proprietary
conditions,
and
it
is,
there
are
some
stiff
penalties.
If
you
we
break
these
regulations,
it
can
be
very
expensive
for
you
and
very
scary,
and
we
don't
want
volunteering
or
open
source
to
be
scary.
B
A
Your
best
bet
is
to
join
a
team,
there's
lots
of
teams
at
universities.
There's
teams
like
us
that
are
non-profits,
there's
amateur
radio
organizations
all
over
the
world
that
do
wonderful
work
in
the
amateur
satellite
service.
So
there's
lots
of
opportunities
to
do
this
and
there's
a
few
commercial
companies
where
you
could,
probably
you
know
either
either
end
up
working
there
or
the
few
that
do
open
source
work
would
actually
take
you
on
and
those
are
the
paths.
A
B
A
Yeah,
this
is
a
wonderful
aspect
of
this
village,
and
so
it's
generally
wi-fi
based
but
not
exclusively.
It's
and
your
challenge
is
that
you
sit
down
with
either
an
sdr
or
usually
a
software
defined
radio
of
some
sort,
and
you
take
on
the
challenges
and
there's
a
huge
variety.
B
A
Like
any
good
question,
the
answer
is,
it
depends
because
there's
a
huge
variety
of
ways
to
do
a
wireless
ctf
like
this,
so
you
might
have
to
find
like
something
in
the
payload
you
might
have
to
demodulate
or
decode
something.
That's
it's
not
quite
standard.
You
might
have
to
find
something.
That's
really
obscure,
so
there's
just
an
immense
variety.
Okay,.
B
B
A
Everyone
is
welcome.
You
do
not
have
to
be
an
expert
to
join.
You
just
have
to
be
willing
to
become
more
of
one
along
the
way,
we're
here
to
help
people
learn
about
open
source,
digital
radio
for
space
and
terrestrial,
and
we
also
have
some
demos
over
here
of
things
that
are
working
and
some
stickers
and
some
patches
and
some
buttons
and
all
sorts
of
fun
things.