HITB 2008 is the first actual security conference that I have physically attended, although I have been watching videos and slides of various conferences, especially blackhat/defcon. There were a couple of interesting booths, namely CtF, Open Hack, Wireless Village and Lock Picking Village (LPV).

HITB Booth

CtF in progress
So HITB Day 1 commenced, with an introduction to Click-Jacking by Jeremiah Grossman as the first keynote address.

Jeremiah's Keynote Speech
Before I go into the details of his keynote speech, I need to iterate, and reiterate, that the emcee’s distasteful slang, accent and speech is, in no way, a representation of how people from Singapore / Malaysia speak. Perhaps the organizers realized that as well as we never heard that speaking style again, after two of his narrations.
Jeremiah shared a couple of interesting PoCs for Click-Jacking, including but not limited to - tapping of webcams and microphones through Flash Player, allowing of access to the local machine (again, through Flash Player), etc.

See the"Always allow" radio button? Imagine "Allow site to remember login credentials?" before that. Think Click-Jacking, think pwnt.
It was an interesting keynote address with interesting examples.
Marcus Ranum’s speech, on the contrary, was slightly boring in comparison. It was mainly theory and definitions, which didn’t interest me much.
There were two highlights of the event today (in my opinion).
1. Hacking Internet Kiosks by Paul Craig
Paul put together an interesting presentation on how to “hack” Internet kiosks - getting a shell, getting the taskbar to show, getting files downloaded / uploaded with notepad, bypassing kiosks blacklists, etc. He compiled an entire list of possible attacks in a simple AIO application - http://ikat.ha.cked.net/ - it even comes in a portable version! The presentation was attended by many and I’m sure everyone enjoyed it. Both the presenter and the content were deliciously juicy.
2. Lock-Picking Lab by TOOOLS
At Track III, which, IMHO, is the best track to be in because of its hands-on experience that you will get there (which you cannot get from just watching videos), TOOOLS gave our lock picks and sample locks for us to try picking and introduced a couple of techniques. Overall, this lab was well-received and many loved it.
Tomorrow, I’ll mainly attend the lab sessions. I’m sure I’ll learn a lot from them.