Originally posted by MINDustry
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In the most basic sense, a DCG could be formed with as few as maybe 5 to 10 people, that share curiosity and willingness to do effort and no unique knowledge. Among these people, each can find a topic that interests them, study a topic, and then at the next monthly meeting, discuss what they have learned in a condensed format and reduce the time others might spend to learn the same thing. Each person tackling a separate idea, and reporting back to the group each month is a way to share this knowledge and understanding.
If any of your would-be members have any unique experience, then the effort in research in reduced, as they can describe things they know.
The most difficult problems in running a DCG are:
* Finding topics that interest people enough to attend
* Getting people to demonstrate those topics
What kinds of topics would be useful for the masses as well as people into hacking? (Some suggestions)
* Compare/Contrast various privacy-enhancing technologies (torrent )for filesharing), "hideMyAss", tor or new-comer "DemonSaw" for web browsing, RedPhone/TextSecure/Signal, vs. Silent Circle's "Silent Phone" or "Silent text", etc. for voice and text. These are things that can interest informed members of the public, and media/press
* Pull up a collection of old videos from past DEF CON, and have someone edit multiple presentation down to 5 minutes each -- the act reducing a full hour-long presentation and distill it to 5 minutes can be a very hard task. It can help educate the person doing the presentation on the topic, as they have to understand it well enough to tech it
* Compare and Contract various pre-packages security auditing tools/distros: SecurityOnion, BlackBox, Kali, etc.
* Demonstrate useful tools in a meeting for each specialized tool: wireshark and protocol analysis, Decompilers, Metasploit, burpsuite tools, openvas/nessus, etc. Each of these has enough depth to easily last a full meeting/demo for more than 1 hour.
You can recruit people from UserGroups (Linux/BSD/Windows/Mac User Groups, and computer/programming clubs, colleges/universities, etc.
How did DEF CON start? First one, then two people had a plan to have a party in Las Vegas -- a gathering of people on BBS. One dropped out of the planning, leaving it to one guy, Jeff Moss. Now, around 24 years later, we still have meetings, which have grown organically based on what attendees/members volunteer to offer.
Why not start a DCG where you are and learn what you want?
HTH,
-Cot
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