Lead Infrastructure Security Engineer at Salesforce
Berkeley, California, United States
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Summary
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Senior
Peter Shipley is a Lead Infrastructure Security Engineer based in Berkeley with 13 years of hands-on experience securing large-scale AWS and hybrid environments. He designs and enforces infrastructure security policy, performs security reviews for dev and production systems, and has led migrations and monitoring deployments across enterprises like Salesforce, Blackhawk Network, and OneLogin. A pragmatic engineer and mentor, he automates infrastructure and testing workflows (CloudFormation, Puppet) to reduce operational risk and coaches teams to bake security into delivery. An active open-source contributor with deep embedded/RF signal knowledge, he’s improved decoders and demodulation for popular projects like rtl_433 and multimon-ng, revealing a rarely seen fusion of infrastructure security and low-level radio/signal expertise. Known for preventing incidents before they happen, he combines researcher instincts (founder of a security licensing firm) with production-grade execution at scale.
Program to decode radio transmissions from devices on the ISM bands (and other frequencies)
Role in this project:
Back-end Developer / Embedded Systems Engineer
Contributions:9 reviews, 23 commits, 25 PRs in 1 year
Contributions summary:Peter primarily contributed to the `rtl_433` repository by adding and improving decoders for various radio frequency devices. Their work involved implementing new decoders for protocols such as SCMplus, Insteon, and IDM, while also fixing false positives for existing decoders. The user also updated existing meter type lists and improved existing code by including code for the correct encoding types. The contributions demonstrate a strong understanding of radio frequency communication protocols and signal processing.
Contributions summary:Peter primarily contributed to the codebase by addressing compiler warnings and cleaning up code. Their work involved modifying multiple C source files, including `unixinput.c`, `pocsag.c`, and `demod_x10.c`, indicating a focus on improving the core functionality and stability of the project. They also introduced a new feature, `demod_dumpcsv.c`, which allows the dumping of data in a CSV format, and made changes to incorporate the X10RF signal demodulation capability, demonstrating an understanding of signal processing and data handling.
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