What's the point of defcon?

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  • icetre
    Aristocrat
    • Oct 2003
    • 70

    #16
    Re: What's the point of defcon?

    Originally posted by Deviant Ollam
    yeah, it's all about the flexibility for me. i'd prefer to keep brainstorming on ways to dump the Riv's rules, regs, and interference when it comes to parties.
    <obvious>Dump the riv in favor of a non-casio hotel with the capacity for 8k, allow for preregistration, cap registration at 8k much like shmoocon.

    Detach BH from DC by at least 2 or 3 weeks, and make BH atendees pay for DC if they still want to go. </obvious>

    Several times over the last 10 years the price of a badge has been raised. One of the reasons mentioned each time was to cut down on posers.

    Well 10 years later, the posers are still here, in abundance, and the price is higher than ever.

    The above will cut down on the lamer ratio and make con a little more predictable and tolerable for the rest of us.

    Comment

    • Schuyler
      Locksport Enthusiast
      • Apr 2007
      • 143

      #17
      Re: What's the point of defcon?

      I've been blown away for two years now by IOActive's Freakshow. So, how are they pulling it off? While some of the kegs tapped out part way through the evening, I was still finding running, free beer even after the bartenders had packed up. The music was incredible, the inflatables were ridiculous, but also ridiculously popular and fun to watch. The fire dancer & bendy girl were both wicked talented and well displayed.

      I mean, great music, huge venue, late night, free beer, also a cash bar, fire! and enormous inflatable games. Are they just blowing tons of money to get the Riv stamp of approval?

      I tend to agree with Barkode on the nice coverage for attendees. I'll be honest, I was jonesing for a Ninja badge this year (stupid Valanx knocked me out of first place at the last possible moment in Gringo and got one for himself as a result...) and have wanted to attend it since before I came to my first DC. I've been reading about DC (and all the other Cons) & all the ancillary events for years. I'm a total culture dork and always remain a bit in awe when I'm actually in attendance now.

      That said? Freakshow is half of what I've talked about since I've been home this time around & I can't imagine skipping it for something else next year. There are great parties, open to all DC attendees. B&W ball seem to be getting dismissed by a lot of people, too, but they pull in a lot of attendees too. And at the end of the night, there are still plenty of people leaving a door open, or shouting invites out of their windows to come hang out. Just saying, when it comes to concern of noobs being able to find a place in the hotel to have fun, socialize, drink & dance, I don't think we're in dire straits by any means.

      Comment

      • Dark Tangent
        The Dark Tangent
        • Sep 2001
        • 2732

        #18
        Re: What's the point of defcon?

        Originally posted by icetre
        Several times over the last 10 years the price of a badge has been raised. One of the reasons mentioned each time was to cut down on posers.

        Well 10 years later, the posers are still here, in abundance, and the price is higher than ever.
        Who mentioned it was to cut down on the posers?

        I raise the price because there is an economic reality called "inflation" and "The cost of doing business", not to keep people out.

        For example, in 2007, ShmooCon was $75, $150, and $300 depending on when you bought tickets, and they have 30+ sponsors in 2009. DEF CON has no paying sponsors and is a flat $120.

        Maybe next year I'll have to raise the price again and we can see if your theory works! ;-)
        Last edited by Dark Tangent; August 9, 2009, 21:58.
        PGP Key: https://defcon.org/html/links/dtangent.html

        Comment

        • TheCotMan
          *****Retired *****
          • May 2004
          • 8857

          #19
          Re: What's the point of defcon?

          Originally posted by Deviant Ollam
          unless things can literally be 3 to 5 minutes of a trip, i can't imagine liking them a whole lot... there's just that painfully difficult text "hey, we're in [whatever room] and it's great, you should stop by if you can!" that makes me go "urgh" if i'm off site.
          You sir, are far more social than I am. Me? I tend to go to one party, and hang out there for a while. Once I get to a location, I pretty much stay there and socialize with the people that are there. If parties were first-person-shooters, I'd probably be a camper, and stay in one location, on the grassy knoll, or maybe the book depository. ;-)

          Additionally, with the results of the various parties being shut down in private rooms, and in suites, in 5 minutes, that party you were heading to could be closed by the time you get there.

          Only the Skybox parties, and maybe the "Top of the Riv" locations have had much success at having parties last longer, but even the Top Of the Riv was shutdown early one year because of noise.

          If I was going to host a party for Defcon, and I just observed the failure in parties this year, and parties that were shut down, I too would prefer to go with a known-good, and workable solution. Since we've been at the riv, how many parties have been shut down?

          Compare that to the number off off-site parties that have been shut down.

          It seems the off-site location understand that their job is making their customers happy, and their customer are likely their primary source of income, or a substantial part of their income. For example, to the Riv, Defcon is a "big" customer, but compared to a tiny penthouse or Skybox party, the party is tiny. Because of this, smaller off-site venues are likely to be more accommodating to their customers, and not kick their customers out. Additionally, if an off-site party *does* happen to go sour, the people throwing the party are not at risk for being perma-banned from the location of Defcon, and as a result, perma-banned from Defcon so long as it is at that location.

          This provides 2 common tools used in security:
          * Encapsulation: What happens at the off-site party, stays at the off-site party
          * Layered Security: A barrier exists between the off-site location and the hotel so that future Defcon attendance is not a risk.

          I can see many advantages to having a party off-site, and the only disadvantage is to the possible attendees.

          Most of the people that attend Defcon are adults, and can make up their own minds. If they want to boycott, or skip all off-site parties because off-site parties hinders by encumbering agility to change their mind and follow-through, then they can make a rational decision about off-site parties and not attend them.

          Ultimately, that is what it comes down to: choice. When we are invited, we can all choose to go, or not. If we don't go, then we must have found something better, and if we found something better, what is wrong with that? :-)

          Me? I prefer to not look a gift horse in the mouth. If I'm lucky enough to get to a party, even if it is off site, I will be thankful and appreciative for the opportunity, and if I have nothing else going on, consider the field trip. Life is what happens to us when we are planning to do something else. (Yuck. Now I feel like a hippie for saying that.)

          I like the choices. I like the diversity. I like on-site and off-site parties. All of these choices are really great. The only problem I see is making a decision.

          Now, back to the topic at hand, and an obligatory on-topic reply:
          What is the point of Defcon? Why does Defcon exist?

          The point of Defcon is for people to meet each other, talk, listen and socialize.
          Defcon exists because people go to Defcon and contribute to Defcon. If people stopped going to Defcon, there would be no Defcon. In other news, Defcon 17 was canceled. If you were at Defcon 17, you must have just dreamed it up, and you probably shouldn't take that drug test at work on Monday.

          Comment

          • LosT
            Contest Creator / Goon
            • May 2004
            • 1389

            #20
            Re: What's the point of defcon?

            The point of Defcon is to give me a place to run the Mystery Challenge. ;)

            LosT

            Comment

            • xor
              not
              • Aug 2007
              • 1347

              #21
              Re: What's the point of defcon?

              Originally posted by Dark Tangent
              Who mentioned it was to cut down on the posers?

              I raise the price because there is an economic reality called "inflation" and "The cost of doing business", not to keep people out.

              For example, in 2007, ShmooCon was $75, $150, and $300 depending on when you bought tickets, and they have 30+ sponsors in 2009. DEF CON has no paying sponsors and is a flat $120.

              Maybe next year I'll have to raise the price again and we can see if your theory works! ;-)

              Sponsors...posers, sponsors...posers; we don't need no stinking sponsors and posers!!!! Defcon should stay like Neil Young, brought to you , by you. Of course if sponsorship means more free open bars, and strippers perhaps sponsorship isn't such a bad thing


              xor
              Last edited by xor; August 10, 2009, 13:41.
              Just because you can doesn't mean you should. This applies to making babies, hacking, and youtube videos.

              Comment

              • icetre
                Aristocrat
                • Oct 2003
                • 70

                #22
                Re: What's the point of defcon?

                Originally posted by Schuyler
                That said? Freakshow is half of what I've talked about since I've been home this time around & I can't imagine skipping it for something else next year. There are great parties, open to all DC attendees. B&W ball seem to be getting dismissed by a lot of people, too, but they pull in a lot of attendees too. And at the end of the night, there are still plenty of people leaving a door open, or shouting invites out of their windows to come hang out. Just saying, when it comes to concern of noobs being able to find a place in the hotel to have fun, socialize, drink & dance, I don't think we're in dire straits by any means.
                Dude the freak show is a *corporate* event. If I've said it once, I've said it a million times. *any* asshole can open their wallet, it takes fucking TALENT to do what Penthouse/Ninjas do (not forgetting the other parties, but they mostly play by the riv's rules. Cash bar, etc.)

                It's not about amazing parties. It's about the average joe being able to throw down. IOActive throws down cash to do that.

                I can tell you for the last 3 years (not counting this year) the main source of cash for the penthouse party was *my wallet* It was done on the cheap using our talent, bartenders, security, food, and booze.

                That party takes me over a *year* to organize and fund. The only sponsors I've accepted in the past were merchandie sponsors. IE Brawndo. Other than this year *no one* gives me dime one other than Dallas, and his contribution while very much appreciated is about 1% of the total budget.

                Just to make you realize: Your comparing apples to sausage gravy.

                The freakshow is NOT the same thing as Penthouse/Ninjas and honestly shouldn't even be mentioned in the same sentence.

                Part of the reason that this matters, is that it used to be that ANYONE willing to put forth the effort and a minimal amount of cash can do what the ninjas and the penthouse does. Because of the Riv's draconian policies, that's no longer the case.

                Comment

                • icetre
                  Aristocrat
                  • Oct 2003
                  • 70

                  #23
                  Re: What's the point of defcon?

                  Originally posted by Dark Tangent
                  Who mentioned it was to cut down on the posers?

                  I raise the price because there is an economic reality called "inflation" and "The cost of doing business", not to keep people out.

                  For example, in 2007, ShmooCon was $75, $150, and $300 depending on when you bought tickets, and they have 30+ sponsors in 2009. DEF CON has no paying sponsors and is a flat $120.

                  Maybe next year I'll have to raise the price again and we can see if your theory works! ;-)


                  I could swear that's not the case, as it has been mentioned numerous times in the forums, but being that I'm entirely too lazy too look I will concede that your correct and apologize.

                  My suggestions weren't entirely baseless though DT. With a convention of this size I think we're going to have to come to grips that pre-reg is needed.

                  I for one am very public about being at con. Allow for on site cash reg for the paranoid and paypal for the rest of us.

                  I'm sure there's quite a few people who would pre-reg.

                  Further benefit: Put the pre-reg funds in a interest bearing account and make even more money while waiting for con. :)

                  Myself, I claim defcon as business related training on my taxes. I'm pretty sure everyone knows I go and what my government name is.

                  Comment

                  • Vyrus
                    Member
                    • Dec 2003
                    • 190

                    #24
                    Re: What's the point of defcon?

                    Originally posted by icetre
                    Dude the freak show is a *corporate* event. If I've said it once, I've said it a million times. *any* asshole can open their wallet, it takes fucking TALENT to do what Penthouse/Ninjas do.
                    quoted for truth. honestly i think some of the argument here is getting a bit more about the "parties" and the logistical and financial burden, which exists for sure but the way i see it the REAL issue at hand is that the "attendee" party is already dead.

                    I would most emphatically support anything necessary to make sure that the staple parties of defcon don't go away but the REAL spirit of the con for me when i started (just like kalahar, as a teenager who knew absolutely NULL walking around the pools at the AP) is in the goon "can opener" philosophy of yester year. the BEST parties didn't HAVE names back in the day, they were random people who bought some booze and open there door and played some music. You walked in and within the next hour you didn't know if you would be hacking apart a vending machine for buffers, or testing some new drunken devised crypto theory on the wifi network. or just staying up till all hours of the night talking about shit NOBODY else you know at home can / will converse about. THIS is what defcon has lost... THIS is what must be reattained.

                    much like CP i cant say i have the "magic bullet" answer for this one but while i agree that doing a 100% off- site move of the parties might save our unique party "scene"; it is IMO definitely NOT the answer to the over all "comradely of defcon" problem. the social atmosphere as a whole must be re - attained and that has to happen AT the venue, weather it be at the riv or not.

                    i like the "defcon tower" idea but i honestly don't know the feasibility of such a request, as it simply does not seem as if we have enough leverage to squeeze the riv hard enough. there going to get paid regardless and they will have no qualms about moving our entire con back to "biz as usual". i would LOVE to see defcon move to a resort of some kind in hopes that it might offer the same "mini village" like atmosphere we had at the Alexis Park but i honestly dont know the feasibility of this ether.

                    Comment

                    • Schuyler
                      Locksport Enthusiast
                      • Apr 2007
                      • 143

                      #25
                      Re: What's the point of defcon?

                      Originally posted by icetre
                      The freakshow is NOT the same thing as Penthouse/Ninjas and honestly shouldn't even be mentioned in the same sentence.
                      I didn't at all mean to offend. Just trying to ask if all they are doing is throwing money at the problem of the Riv. If that's the case, then yes, it's a moot example, but again, it was a question, not an accusation. If they have managed to pave any of the rockier roads in the planning of their party, that you or any other attendee party could make use of, it seems like it would be good to know about. Again, if it's just cash, then yeah, it's moot.

                      I'll also reassert that the random room party atmosphere isn't dead. I don't think it will ever die. I just think as the random room parties turn into more organized, annual events, they will hit a hard transitional wall from "hey, you guys, I've got a keg, come grab a beer" to a formalized event.

                      I know that I popped into several random room parties of people I had never met before & wasn't the only one there, so I'm confident there are plenty of people that don't believe the open door impromptu parties are a thing of the past.
                      Last edited by Schuyler; August 10, 2009, 10:01. Reason: crazy double negativing

                      Comment

                      • flea
                        Member
                        • Aug 2003
                        • 77

                        #26
                        Re: What's the point of defcon?

                        I feel like everything has been said so I'll keep this short and just add support.

                        agree:
                        the riv is taking a lot of fun out of defcon.
                        room parties are 1/2 of the fun of defcon.
                        cash bars just will NOT satisfy attendees.
                        with all due respect to kode and ninjas (and a lot is due), offsite parties are a bummer
                        sat night felt like 1/2 of defcon was missing.
                        freakshow is a corp event that takes away space from other fun (B&W etc)

                        disagree:
                        -the riv is just trying to run a business, I think they're trying to squeeze us.
                        -everybody at the riv is against us, I think Theresa genuinely wants to make us happy
                        -riv security hates us, I think that they have to look at everything and make a lot of judgment calls.

                        In summary, when all of the factors are applied, I think the result is that the riv is not doing so well as defcon's host. I understand they're starved for cash but they're not going to get it squeezing us. For instance, food was HORRIBLE AND OVERPRICED. Want to make some money riv? Feed us something edible and well priced, we'll beat a path to it.

                        OPEN THE POOL. KEEP IT OPEN. MAKE IT A **PRIORITY** TO REOPEN WHEN OUTSIDE FORCES MAKE YOU CLOSE IT. I know for a FACT that nobody was really all that concerned it was closed for the bees, same kind of urgency that would apply any time of the year. THE POOL IS IMPORTANT TO US.

                        I think it's pretty clear, you'll have a hard time finding people in support of the riv at this point. Time to look at other options and let the riv compete.


                        (longer than I wanted)

                        Comment

                        • Chris
                          Great Satan of the East
                          • Oct 2001
                          • 2866

                          #27
                          Re: What's the point of defcon?

                          The point of DEF CON to me is that it's the one time of year that pretty much all of my friends are in the same (general) place at the same time. The parties are important to me, but I miss the Splash bar as much as anything else. It was a Vortex that pretty much everyone had to walk by and get sucked into to hang out for a while and catch up.

                          The thing is, the point of DEF CON is going to be different for each person. Flea's post is a perfect example. To him and many other people the pool is extremely important. I have never been in the pool at DEF CON (at ANY venue). It's important to me only in the fact that some of my friends (who are important to me) look to the pool as a highlight of their DEF CON. It's very easy to get tunnel vision and assume that if it's not important to you it isn't important enough to matter and I find that attitude frustrating.

                          I ended up rambling on this a bit more than I meant to but I think my general point got across. I don't think Kallahar's goal in asking this quiestion was to provide a definitive answer as much as to provide a forum for everyone to explain what's important to them. Every person that comes to DEF CON, attendee and staff alike, have different expectations of what they are going to get out of it and what's important to them...what "makes" their DEF CON. Let's try to keep this post in that spirit and talk about what we LIKE about DEF CON and why we keep coming back year after year rather than minimize the facets of the CON that other people like but we personally could care less about.
                          perl -e 'print pack(c5, (41*2), sqrt(7056), (unpack(c,H)-2), oct(115), 10)'

                          Comment

                          • Voltage Spike
                            Ce n'est pas un personne
                            • Jun 2004
                            • 1049

                            #28
                            Re: What's the point of defcon?

                            Regarding the pool, I forgot to ask: why was it an unmonitored gathering place Wednesday night, but a secured area where we weren't allowed to sit the remaining nights?

                            Originally posted by icetre
                            My suggestions weren't entirely baseless though DT. With a convention of this size I think we're going to have to come to grips that pre-reg is needed.

                            I for one am very public about being at con. Allow for on site cash reg for the paranoid and paypal for the rest of us.
                            I still don't understand how this makes anything better. I hand six bills, I get a badge. Time of transaction was literally about four seconds. Perhaps other people weren't preparing their money ahead of time or were asking questions of the Reg staff?

                            If your goal is simply to bar people from attending, then you are simply asking most of my friends to not attend. Not everyone has the flexibilty to set their schedule six months in advance. That, and I think you'd be removing a lot of great people who don't consider Defcon as a priority. Not everyone wants to roll out of bed at 8am on a special day (which may or may not have made its way onto the calendar) to fight in line for access to an overloaded web site in the hopes that they might secure a ticket.

                            Crowding is a slight issue, but it is mostly the attendees causing traffic issues (by not being aware of their surroundings). It also isn't that bad compared to, say, a popular music venue or CES.

                            Anyway, I notice that there aren't really complaints about the contests, the speeches, or the villages. So apparently the Riviera provides for most of the conference. If they could bring back the Splash bar, open the pool area, and relax about room gatherings that aren't out of hand then I think we'd be set.

                            Oh, and better food (for people that remember to eat throughout the weekend).

                            Comment

                            • YenTheFirst
                              Member
                              • Aug 2008
                              • 282

                              #29
                              Re: What's the point of defcon?

                              Registration wasn't bad at all, once the badges arrived.

                              I was there Thursday at 10:00-ish, and yes, the line was long, and didn't move at all. It was a good chance to meet and talk to people. Once the badges arrived, the line moved very quickly, and everything worked smoothly.

                              If there's no badge shipping SNAFUs next year (BY CHRISTMAS!!!), registration is not a problem at all, and pre-registration entirely unnecessary. (except, perhaps, for securing an electronic badge instead of the paper one.)
                              It's not stupid, it's advanced.

                              Comment

                              • TechnoWeenie
                                Member
                                • Mar 2002
                                • 186

                                #30
                                Re: What's the point of defcon?

                                Any kind of 'pre-reg' will actually SLOW things down. Having two lines, validating names, and just cleaning up the "mess" and bill backs from stolen cards is a pain. CASH is king and works well. I run a very efficient reg desk even when my supplies are messed up. I dream of a day (next year?) when everything is plentiful and on time. Folks ask me how come I do not have “reg babes” doing the cash transactions… oh how I would love to sit back and work with a bunch of cute girls, however I know even this will slow things down as folks flirt, talk, and just stare at them. Hence I have always preferred the so called ‘reg grannies’.

                                I do read the suggestions.. keep them coming, but so far, most everyone agrees that we just need the supplies on time, and plentiful.

                                TW





                                Originally posted by YenTheFirst
                                Registration wasn't bad at all, once the badges arrived.

                                I was there Thursday at 10:00-ish, and yes, the line was long, and didn't move at all. It was a good chance to meet and talk to people. Once the badges arrived, the line moved very quickly, and everything worked smoothly.

                                If there's no badge shipping SNAFUs next year (BY CHRISTMAS!!!), registration is not a problem at all, and pre-registration entirely unnecessary. (except, perhaps, for securing an electronic badge instead of the paper one.)

                                Comment

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