Azazel System for Emergency Shelters: Rapid-Deploy Portable SOC/NOC on Raspberry Pi
DAY 1
10:00-
10:40
During war or disasters, temporary evacuation shelters and volunteer field hospitals become the softest cyber targets. Yet they still need Wi-Fi for MyNumber identity checks, EMR exchange and supply tracking, while lacking SOC staff, stable power or bandwidth. We present Azazel System, an open-source “Cyber Scapegoat Gateway” on a single Raspberry Pi 5 that boots a full SOC/NOC—Suricata IDS/IPS, OpenCanary decoys, Vector log pipeline, Mattermost alerts—within 15 minutes. We share architecture, field tests (30 s detection, 12 % compromise rate, 13 W), and the legal model that lets volunteers run it under Japan’s new Active Cyber Defense rules. Takeaways: ① build & image the device, ② tune latency-injection to slow attackers, ③ integrate with 00000JAPAN or LEO-satellite links. Live demo and open-source image provided.
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Location :
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Track 3(Room 3)
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Category :
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Bluebox
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Share :
Speakers
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Makoto Sugita
杉田 誠
I am a senior manager overseeing network operations in a government agency, with a focus on infrastructure stability and continuity. Beyond my professional responsibilities, I pursue cybersecurity as an independent researcher, focusing on active cyber defense and deception technologies. My recent work explores tactical delay strategies inspired by military doctrine, implemented as lightweight deception gateways. I have presented at BSides Tokyo, Black Hat USA Arsenal, BSides Las Vegas, and SecTor.
I hold the CISSP certification and actively promote defensive innovation through open-source development and community engagement.