Security experts boycott conference over NSA interference

At least eight computer security researchers have withdrawn from a major security conference in a protest against the conference's sponsor, security firm RSA.

Last month it was reported that a secret contract had been signed between the RSA and the US National Security Agency (NSA) where the company took a $10 million (£6 million, AU$ 11 million) payment for making a specific NSA-developed algorithm the default for their security products.

A question of morality

Josh Thomas, of Atredis Partners, announced on December 22 that he was pulling his talk due to a "moral imperative." Mikko Hypponen, chief research officer at Finnish cybersecurity company F-Secure, followed suit and revealed that he would be cancelling his talk via an open letter on December 23.

They have been joined by Chris Palmer, software security engineer at Google, Jeffrey Carr, founder and CEO of Taia Global, Christopher Soghoian, principal technologist with the ACLU and another Google security engineer, Adam Langley.

Hugh Thompson, the event committee chair, said he was "disappointed" before adding: "Security has risen in the agenda of almost every company and every government in a way that we've never seen before. I think that the security dialogue is more intense than it has ever been."