I manage cybersecurity team of 10 where I work. A major part of our job duties is providing application security consulting and in house penetration testing for our many development teams.
Two months from now, I will be travelling to Las Vegas with my team to attend (in an official capacity, representing our company) the 2024 Black Hat conference. This conference is a red team / offensive security / penetration testing focused conference aimed at cybersecurity professionals in the application security domain. Attendees are expected to bring laptops to participate in the many hands-on labs that involve working with deliberately vulnerable machines / IT assets. There is a possibility that antimalware and firewall protection may need to be disabled to simulate real world conditions and allow malware to be tested properly.
My manager is asking us to bring personal (non company owned) machines to the conference which I am reluctant to do due to risk of compromise from malware. My machine is relatively pricey ($1000 +) and also contains personal documents in addition to being used for banking and other activities involving my PII.
The company provided laptop cannot be used as deliberate exposure to malware, , even inside a virtual machine, is inherently risky and can endanger other IT assets of my company (e.g: after conference, I join the company network with a compromised machine).
Examples of malware exposure:
- Ransomware samples
- Raw malware code with antivirus disabled
Question
How can I push back against my manager's ask professionally? I dont want to strain the work relationship.
If I bought a cheap, disposable laptop solely for the conference, would I be setting a bad precedent for my team / other employees of my company given I am a manager?
Additional information
For a company laptop, our team uses Windows laptops for day to day work (email, documentation viewing, MS Teams etc.) and SSH into a pen testing servers running Kali Linux or Parrot. Our team is allowed to install security tools such as Kali Linux or Parrot OS locally on our work machines. We also have company licenses for VMWare on local laptops and if we were to install Kali / Parrot locally, segregation between guest and host OS will be maintained in NAT mode.