Matt Suiche

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Matt Suiche
Suiche presenting a talk at a conference
Matt Suiche.
Born (1988-09-22) 22 September 1988 (age 33)
NationalityFrench
Known forComputer security
Memory forensics
Virtualization
Scientific career
FieldsComputer science
InfluencesFravia
Websitewww.comae.com

Matthieu Suiche (born September 22, 1988), also known as "Matt" and under the handle "msuiche", is a French hacker and entrepreneur widely known as the founder of MoonSols, and co-founder of before it was acquired[1] by VMWare in 2014. In March 2014, Suiche was highlighted as one of the 100 key French developers in a report[2] for French minister Fleur Pellerin.

Career[]

Suiche is best known for his work in the memory forensics and computer security fields. His most notable research contributions include Windows hibernation file[3] analysis and Mac OS X physical memory analysis.[4]

Furthermore, he created LiveCloudKd,[5] a utility to analyze running Microsoft Hyper-V virtual machines. Microsoft Technical fellow Mark Russinovich highlighted it on his blog[6] before introducing[7] a similar feature in one of Microsoft's tools. Russinovich also said "We were so impressed that we invited Matthieu to speak about live kernel debugging and LiveCloudKd at this year’s BlueHat Security Briefings".

He is also known to have discovered multiple security flaws in multiple Microsoft Windows kernel components.[8][9][10] Suiche is Microsoft Most Valuable Professional in Enterprise Security.[11]

Suiche started his career as an independent security researcher by presenting his work about the Microsoft Windows hibernation file for the first time at the international conference PacSec held in Tokyo in 2007.[12] He also had been invited by Europol to speak at their internal High Tech Crime Experts Meeting in 2008.[13][14] Between 2009 and 2010, he worked as a researcher for Netherlands Forensic Institute in The Hague before starting MoonSols which specialized in memory forensics and incident response.

Suiche was also contributor[15] of the Samba project during the Google Summer of Code in 2008, where he was in charge of implementing the new compression algorithms used by the networking protocols.

In 2011, Suiche founded CloudVolumes (formerly SnapVolumes[16][17]) a California-based virtualization management product company where he served as a Chief Scientist.[18]

Conferences[]

Suiche also had been a frequent speaker at various computer security conferences such as Black Hat Briefings,[19][20] Microsoft Blue Hat Hacker Conference,[21] Shakacon, Hackito Ergo Sum, Europol High Tech Crime Experts Meeting, CanSecWest,[22] PacSec,[23] Hack In The Box, SyScan[24] and Shakacon.

He is on the board of Program Committee of Shakacon security conference, and one of the founders of security conference in Paris.

Pwnie Awards 2013[]

In 2012, Suiche was one of the security researchers (along with several other well-known security researchers) who submitted a bogus article[25] entitled "Nmap: The Internet Considered Harmful - DARPA Inference Checking Kludge Scanning" to Hakin9 Information Security Magazine. This article has been used as a social proof to demonstrate the lack of relevance and expertise of certain media dedicated to Information Security, but also to criticize spamming techniques used by media in order to generate quantity-oriented data rather than quality-oriented information. The following year, this article resulted in being awarded the 2013 Pwnie Awards[26][27] attributed to Hakin9 under the "Most Epic FAIL" category.

Awards and recognition[]

  • 2009-2015, Microsoft Most Valuable Professional.[11]
  • 2014, One of the 100 top key developers in France.[2]

Bibliography[]

  • Debugged! Mz/Pe: Magazine For/From Practicing Engineers by Dmitry Vostokov, Matthieu Suiche and Roberto Alexis Farah, OpenTask ISBN 1-90-671738-9, 2009

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ VMware Acquires CloudVolumes, Pioneer of Real-Time Application Delivery Technologies, August 20, 2014
  2. ^ Jump up to: a b Ministère des Petites et Moyennes Entreprises, de l’Innovation et de l’Économie numérique, "Les développeurs, un atout pour la France ", March 06, 2014
  3. ^ Matthieu Suiche. Black Hat Briefings US 2008.Windows hibernation file for fun and profit.
  4. ^ Matthieu Suiche. Black Hat Briefings DC 2010.Advanced Mac OS X Physical Memory Analysis
  5. ^ MoonSols, LiveCloudKd
  6. ^ "LiveKd for Virtual Machine Debugging".
  7. ^ Softpedia, LiveKd 5.0 for Hyper-V Debugging Released to Windows Sysinternals
  8. ^ Microsoft, Microsoft Security Bulletin MS10-048 - Important
  9. ^ Microsoft, Microsoft Security Bulletin MS10-058 - Important
  10. ^ Reuters, Microsoft to thank Google researcher for privately reporting Windows bugs
  11. ^ Jump up to: a b Microsoft, Most Valuable Professional
  12. ^ Nicolas Ruff, Matthieu Suiche (2007). Enter Sandman (why you should never go to sleep). PacSec
  13. ^ "High Tech Crime Experts Meeting". Archived from the original on January 2, 2009.
  14. ^ [1]
  15. ^ "git.samba.org - samba.git/search". git.samba.org.
  16. ^ Yahoo Finance, "CloudVolumes Delivers Industry’s First Instant Workload Management Solutions to Reduce Complexity, Increase Efficiency and Provide Mobility within the Datacenter and Cloud", BusinessWire, May 07, 2013
  17. ^ Bloomberg Businessweek, Matthieu Suiche
  18. ^ Bloomberg, "SnapVolumes Secures $2.3 Million Seed Financing to Redefine Application Deployment and Management of Virtual Desktops, Servers", BusinessWire, November 07, 2012
  19. ^ "Black Hat ® Technical Security Conference: DC 2011 // Speaker Bios". www.blackhat.com.
  20. ^ NetworkWorld, Quirky moments at Black Hat DC 2011 Archived 2014-02-27 at the Wayback Machine
  21. ^ Microsoft,BlueHat Security Briefings: Fall 2010 Sessions
  22. ^ "CanSecWest Applied Security Conference: Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada". cansecwest.com.
  23. ^ PacSec
  24. ^ PC World VN, Hội thảo bảo mật SyScan 2010: Nhiều chủ đề hấp dẫn
  25. ^ The Register, Experts troll 'biggest security mag in the world' with submission
  26. ^ Slashdot, Pwnie Awards 2013 Winners: Barnaby Jack, Edward Snowden, Hakin9, Evad3rs
  27. ^ Pwnie Awards, Pwnie for Most Epic FAIL

External links[]

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