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Free, Hands-On API Security Certification
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June 10 | Booth 414

Announcing the AI Control Platform - See it first at AWS Summit LA

Closed Loop AI Security for AWS

Govern AI in production with a closed loop that runs natively inside your AWS environment — making every AWS security service measurably more effective.  Now available on AWS Marketplace.

Take a demo at the stand and receive an 'In-N-Out' giftcard

Enigma Machine

This electro-mechanical rotor cipher device was used by Nazi Germany to encrypt military communications. Thought unbreakable, it was eventually cracked by Alan Turing’s team at Bletchley Park — proving that complexity is no substitute for resilience.

TBY-8 Radio

Used by Navajo Code Talkers to transmit secure messages during WWII. The Navajo language's complexity, including its unwritten nature, tonal qualities, and unique syntax, made it virtually impossible for the Japanese to decipher. The Navajo Code Talkers ensure message confidentiality and integrity at speed to support critical operations, a role that secure APIs play today.

2600 Magazine

A legendary publication born in the early computer underground, 2600 gave voice to hackers, phreakers, and digital explorers. It championed curiosity and open access—values that echo today in open-source security research and API vulnerability disclosure.

Blackberry 850

The first widely adopted mobile email device brought encrypted corporate communication into pockets everywhere — but also opened a new frontier of remote-access vulnerabilities and mobile API exposure.

Scytale Cipher

This cylindrical tool was used by the Spartans to transmit secret military commands. A strip of parchment wrapped around the rod would reveal a hidden message, unreadable unless wound around a rod of identical diameter — an early example of key-based encryption.

Rosetta Stone

This granodiorite stele, inscribed in three scripts — Greek, Demotic, and hieroglyphics — enabled scholars to decode ancient Egyptian writing. It’s a symbol of language translation and interoperability — the same challenges modern APIs face across platforms and systems.

Caesar Cipher

Attributed to Julius Caesar, this shift cipher replaced each letter with one a fixed number of places down the alphabet. Though simple, it represents one of the earliest known forms of algorithmic encryption — and the enduring principle that obfuscation alone is not security.

Norton Antivirus

Packaged AV software became a household name — but it couldn’t protect against logic abuse or custom API attacks. It represents the limits of file-based scanning in a post-signature world.

Just Try Wallarm!

Not going to be in Los Angeles for the AWS Summit? Try for free via the AWS Marketplace.