Dhillon Kannabhiran
Eye of Riyadh identifies Dhillon Kannabhiran as HITB Founder and CEO in the Dubai event coverage.
SourceHITBSecConf2018 Dubai · United Arab Emirates · 2018
Special-edition electronic badge with Badge Village hacking path
A conservative record for the special-edition electronic badge given to HITBSecConf2018 Dubai attendees, documented by the official event archive as a hackable badge with Badge Village support.
People
Eye of Riyadh identifies Dhillon Kannabhiran as HITB Founder and CEO in the Dubai event coverage.
SourceOfficial publisher of the HITBSecConf2018 Dubai archive documenting the special-edition electronic badge and Badge Village.
SourceIt adds a Middle East badge record to the worldwide compendium and shows HITB carrying electronic badge culture into its Dubai return, alongside soldering, hardware, IoT, SCADA, car-hacking, wireless, and maker villages.
The official archive confirms a special-edition electronic badge and a dedicated Badge Village, but recovered public sources in this pass do not expose a reliable component list, schematic, board files, or firmware repository.
The Badge Village promised getting started with reprogramming, expanding badge functionality, unlocking secret features, and mini-games; component-level firmware claims remain intentionally withheld pending primary technical archives.
HITB framed the badge as something attendees could hack on-site rather than only wear, placing it among the CommSec and village activities that made the Dubai event hands-on and maker-friendly.
Lifecycle
HITB described badge hacking as a path to unlock secret features, mini-games, and expanded functionality during the Dubai event.
SourceThe badge sat in a broader hands-on event environment with soldering, hardware/chip-off, IoT, car-hacking, wireless, AI, open-source, and maker activities.
SourceThe event archive says Badge Village helped attendees get started reprogramming the special-edition badge and hacking it to do more.
SourceOperational history
The dossier records distribution and hacking context while avoiding unsupported component-level claims.
The entry remains source-backed and image-free rather than copying event imagery or using generated placeholder art.