All official Hivestorm communications will be sent to the team captain and coach. Check for email from competitions@hivestorm.org or @utsa.edu addresses. Please be sure to add competitions@hivestorm.org to your "not spam" list.Overview
Hivestorm is a collegiate-focused cyber defense competition. Teams compete by securing provided Windows and Linux based virtual machines - removing malware and other infections, correcting misconfigurations, mitigating vulnerabilities, disabling vulnerable services, and so on. Teams accumulate points for addressing each scored issue and must race against the clock to accumulate as many points as they can before time expires.
Game Play
At the beginning of Hivestorm events, teams are provided with a set of virtual machines each worth 100 points. To score points, teams must address the security related issues on each of those virtual machines. Teams may need to find and remove a persistent threat, correct permissions on the root directory of a webserver, or restrict remote access to the Windows Registry. Team actions are scored in near real-time by automated agents providing direct feedback to competitors for both positive actions (that accumulate points) and negative actions (that result in penalties and a loss of points).
Benefits for Competitors
Hivestorm provides an excellent opportunity for teams to practice security, forensic, configuration, and system administration tasks. The defensive and administration skills developed and exercised in Hivestorm help prepare students for other events such as the Collegiate Cyber Defense Competition or Panoply.
Team Composition
Hivestorm teams consist of 2 to 4 players. Players must be registered students of the institution they are representing. Colleges and universities may enter multiple teams, but students may only participate on a single team during each Hivestorm event.
Hardware and Network Requirements
Teams must have their own equipment capable of running the provided virtual machines. Virtual machines must have Internet connectivity to communicate with the scoring server. The recommended minimum hardware requirements for the host systems running the VMs are:
Processors:
Intel: 64-bit i3 processor �Sandy Bridge� generation or newer
AMD: 64-bit processor �Bulldozer� generation or newer
Virtual Extensions: Virtualization technology/extensions (e.g., VT-x, Vx) must be ENABLED in BIOS
RAM: 8 GB of RAM (each VM will configured to use between 2 and 4 GB of RAM)
Disk Space: 40 GB of free disk space per VM
Display: Capable of supporting 1280x1024 resolution or higher
Hivestorm VMs must have Internet access and be able to communicate with the remote scoring server on TCP ports 80 and 443.
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