Robin is a developer/technical architect working for ByBox, a supply chain technology company in the UK. He’s passionate about development, continuous improvement and all things security (he's a Certified Ethical Hacker). With one foot in Dev and another in Ops, he’s as happy in C# as in PowerShell, in Visual Studio or Hyper-V, in Javascript or Docker.
Other passions include snowboarding, cycling and gin (but not together). He blogs at robinminto.com.
Talks I've Given
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Authentication for Serverless
Featuring Robin Minto
Authentication is a challenge at the best of times and running ""serverless"" adds some new challenges.
.net serverless azure-functions -
Fancy Bears Are Not Your Problem: Real World Appsec
Featuring Robin Minto
Fancy Bear, Stone Panda, Lazarus, Charming Kitten and Equation Group are Advanced Persistent Threat groups. Woah... sounds scary!
What are the threats from these groups? Do we really need to worry about them or do they just make attention grabbing news stories?
In this talk, Robin will explore...
security .net appsec apt -
Security in Cloud-Native
Featuring Robin Minto
Cloud-native is an approach that fully exploits the advantages of the cloud - it's how you build and run your applications to allow easy scaling and continuous deployment.
cloud .net security cloud-native dotnet -
Security in Cloud Native
Featuring Robin Minto
Cloud-native is an approach that fully exploits the advantages of the cloud - it's how you build and run your applications to allow easy scaling and continuous deployment.
continuous-deployment security cloud-native .net -
#FAIL - Lessons from infosec incidents
Featuring Robin Minto
Securing a web application is a challenge. The internet is awash with malicious traffic and web applications are globally accessible. Don’t make it easy for them and the baddies will move on and find someone else to annoy.
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Security basics – key lessons from OWASP and your favourite infosec breaches
Featuring Robin Minto
Securing a web application is a challenge. The internet is awash with malicious traffic and, by their very nature, web applications are globally accessible. Although you probably can’t defend against a determined attacker, you can certainly keep script kiddies and bots at bay. Don’t make it easy...
security dotnet web-applications