Many CTF organizers register their competition with the CTFtime platform. This allows the tracking of the position of teams over time and across competitions. These include "Plaid Parliament of Pwning", "More Smoked Leet Chicken", "Dragon Sector", "dcua", "Eat, Sleep, Pwn, Repeat", "perfect blue", "organizers" and "Blue Water". Overall the "Plaid Parliament of Pwning" and "Dragon Sector" have both placed first worldwide the most with three times each.
Community competitions Every year there are dozens of CTFs organized in a variety of formats. Many CTFs are associated with cybersecurity conferences such as
DEF CON, various editions of
SANS Institute's NetWars, HITCON, and
BSides. The DEF CON CTF, an attack-defence CTF, is notable for being one of the oldest CTF competitions to exist, and has been variously referred to as the "
World Series", "
Superbowl", and "
Olympics", of hacking by media outlets. The
NYU Tandon hosted Cybersecurity Awareness Worldwide (CSAW) CTF is one of the largest open-entry competitions for students learning cybersecurity from around the world. In addition to conference organized CTFs, many CTF clubs and teams organize CTF competitions. Many CTF clubs and teams are associated with universities, such as the CMU associated Plaid Parliament of Pwning, which hosts PlaidCTF, Some community CTFs are online and open to all participants. The
SANS Institute Holiday Hack Challenge and
TryHackMe Advent of Cyber.
Government-supported competitions Governmentally supported CTF competitions include the
DARPA Cyber Grand Challenge and
ENISA European Cybersecurity Challenge. In 2023, the
US Space Force-sponsored Hack-a-Sat CTF competition included, for the first time, a live orbital satellite for participants to exploit.
Corporate-supported competitions Corporations and other organizations sometimes use CTFs as a training or evaluation exercise. The benefits of CTFs are similar to those of using CTFs in an educational environment. In addition to internal CTF exercises, some corporations such as
Google and
Tencent host publicly accessible CTF competitions. == In popular culture ==