Monthly Archives: November 2025

Welcome to SAS City 2025!

Hi folks!

Phew! Another year – and another Security Analyst Summit wrapped. This time is was – ooh, let me see: yes, the 16th edition of the event, and it was held in the Thai resort village of Khao Lak (here) – about a hundred kilometers north of Phuket.

In case you don’t know already, SAS is a one-of-a-kind security conference – very different from the usual, more buttoned-up, corporate events in the field. It actually started out as a gathering for our internal team – back when our own group of experts was growing and becoming more global. As it did, it made perfect sense to bring everyone together in person once a year: so the team members could get acquainted, interact face-to-face, and share their impressive research and investigations with each other. And it turned out to be a brilliant idea.

Eventually, someone (clearly thinking ahead) suggested we should invite outside cybersecurity experts, and so we began to welcome colleagues from other companies and organizations too. And slowly but surely, year after year, SAS grew into what it is now – a global conference for top analysts that still manages to maintain a bit of a party spirit. Here we allow ourselves to bend the rules a little, play, break from tradition, and do things our own way. But more than that, SAS has kept its club-like, invite-only character: a special expert committee decides who gets to attend. This has helped preserve its more open, candid atmosphere, where folks feel comfortable sharing more than they would at a typical IT security event.

Read on…

Finally – Easter Island and its mysterious stone statues!

Back in school, I think my favorite books were those hefty tomes all about geography, travel, and the world’s remotest corners. That early fascination really took root in my mind and has stayed with me ever since – as you can see in this blog!

Over time, some of those geographical – on-paper – discoveries started turning into real discoveries: the Galapagos, Tibet, Mount Fuji, Drake Passage, Tasmania (the latter – great trip, but we nearly ended up being stranded there (or on mainland Australia) for… years due to our still being there in late March… 2020!).

However, some places I’d always dreamed of visiting stubbornly remained on my to-do list – seemingly just too far and inaccessible. But then, this year, I finally got to visit two of these out-of-the-way places. Back in winter it was the Nazca Lines; and this fall it was Rapa Nui – better known as Easter Island! Oh yes…

“Where’s that?” some might ask – especially if they didn’t pay much attention in geography class. Honestly though, even those who did would probably struggle to show you Rapa Nui on a world map on their first try. Don’t believe me? Go on then – give it a shot! (spoiler: answer in next pic; no peeking!)…

Read on…

Altai – done; Kamchatka – here we come!

Hi folks!

I’ve said it many times before, but it bears repeating: to me, Kamchatka is the most beautiful place on Earth!

It’s a truly magical world of volcanoes, hot springs, geysers, bears, and so much more. Aside from the region’s famously unpredictable (and rarely friendly) weather, every trip here is just awesome. Awesome – yes, but the elements can quickly turn your plans on their head: even I – normally the most upbeat of optimists – this year had my spirits (and clothes) dampened almost to the point of being completely… dissolved! But more on all that later…

…Not that the rain came later; it started right from the get-go: relentless rain, with Kamchatka’s masterpiece-views hidden behind the dense clouds whence the rain came. But as the days went on, the bad weather finally gave way and, in the end, we were rewarded with a few solidly sunny days and all in all the trip turned out just great! Not everything went to plan (does it ever in Kamchatka?), and we didn’t see everything we wanted to – but what we did was just wonderful. See for yourself in the following pics…

At the summit of Avachinsky, with the neighboring Koryaksky volcano behind it:

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Altai trip photo-potpourri: a review of what the cameras did see.

And so, our Altai-Katun rafting adventure was coming to its inevitable end, and so is my Altai-Katun series of posts detailing it. All that’s left to do is share the most interesting photos that I don’t think I’ve shown here before. If I have – apologies for the repeats. So, in this final installment to the series, a brief review of our summer Altai rafting trip – guided by a perusal through said leftover pics.

Altai-2025: a five-day hike through the Altai mountains, then an incredible 500-kilometer rafting journey down the Katun (plus a short side-foray along the Chuya) ->

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The Katun’s “Stumps”: tall waves, whirlpools, and a “toadstool” that pumps!

Continuing the tales of our Altai summer adventure – next up, we’re edging down the Katun with the final stretch fast approaching…

Today’s rapids – the Teldekpen Rapids, aka “the Stumps” (here) – which, in high water, are probably the most difficult, unpredictable, and genuinely dangerous of the whole river. But let’s start from the beginning…

That morning, we saw that the water was still high (as I mentioned earlier, it had rained non-stop the previous day – raising the river by 130cm). On the flat sections, the current was racing along at around 13km/h (if I remember rightly), so there was absolutely no need to paddle ->

Read on…