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Showing content with the highest reputation on 03/27/18 in all areas

  1. Astea i-au venit si lui in loguri.
    3 points
  2. 2 points
  3. https://www.facebook.com/help/223786757631885?helpref=faq_content https://www.facebook.com/help/224562897555674?helpref=faq_content Baga - https://fundatiamereuaproape.ro/donatii-in-cont/
    2 points
  4. Synopsis: Process Dump is a Windows reverse-engineering command-line tool to dump malware memory components back to disk for analysis. Often malware files are packed and obfuscated before they are executed in order to avoid AV scanners, however when these files are executed they will often unpack or inject a clean version of the malware code in memory. A common task for malware researchers when analyzing malware is to dump this unpacked code back from memory to disk for scanning with AV products or for analysis with static analysis tools such as IDA. Source: http://split-code.com/processdump.html (side-note: unul dintre cele mai interesante website-uri din punc de vedere al design-ului) GitHub Repository: https://github.com/glmcdona/Process-Dump Via:
    1 point
  5. Synopsis: The recent DDoS drama with Dyn has had me reading up on Domain Name Systems (DNS). Time and time again, bad guys have proved that one of the best ways to execute a successful Distributed Denial of Service (DDoS) is to hit DNS servers. As a pentester, name servers do come up a lot during assessments, especially during the reconnaissance phases. We still come across a few public name servers allowing zone transfers every now and then, which is always a treat, but I hardly ever look at DNS servers as an actual target. I still haven’t come across a client that’s actually willing to pay anyone to bring their services down. The DDoS against Dyn was particularly troublesome because Dyn is a major DNS provider and the attacks caused serious outages to a number of popular sites; Twitter, Paypal, Reddit, Github, Spotify and more. Which got me thinking; if I was a bad guy doing my recon, looking for the best name servers to hit, how would I go about it? Which name servers would I pick? Querying a domain for the name server(s) it uses is pretty straight forward, but if the name server was my target and a denial of service was my goal, I’d want to find out the opposite; how many domain names are using the target name server? Source: https://thevivi.net/2016/11/17/dnsnitch-reverse-ns-lookups-zone-transfers/ GitHub Repository: https://github.com/V1V1/DNSnitch Bonus: axfr.py - https://github.com/V1V1/axfr.py (script that takes a list of domains as input and attempts zone transfers on all of them against a specified name server)
    1 point
  6. Synopsis: As an emerging concept, the industry has yet to settle on a definitive definition of adversarial simulation, but it involves simulating [components of] targeted attacks in order to test both an organization’s instrumentation stacks and their ability to respond to the attack via their incident response process. This differs from Red Teaming in that adversarial simulation is typically a cooperative activity between the simulation runners and the simulation recipients with an end goal of validating defensive telemetry and testing incident response plans and playbooks. Raphael Mudge wrote a great blog post on the subject, which I recommend. Source: https://medium.com/uber-security-privacy/uber-security-metta-open-source-a8a49613b4a GitHub Repository: https://github.com/uber-common/metta
    1 point
  7. Synopsis: Skilled attackers continually seek out new attack vectors, while employing evasion techniques to maintain the effectiveness of old vectors, in an ever-changing defensive landscape. Many of these threat actors employ obfuscation frameworks for common scripting languages such as JavaScript and PowerShell to thwart signature-based detections of common offensive tradecraft written in these languages. However, as defenders' visibility into these popular scripting languages increases through better logging and defensive tooling, some stealthy attackers have shifted their tradecraft to languages that do not support this additional visibility. At a minimum, determined attackers are adding dashes of simple obfuscation to previously detected payloads and commands to break rigid detection rules. Whitepaper: https://www.fireeye.com/blog/threat-research/2018/03/dosfuscation-exploring-obfuscation-and-detection-techniques.html GitHub Repository: https://github.com/danielbohannon/Invoke-DOSfuscation Source:
    1 point
  8. 1 point
  9. Man, de ce saracia ai luat nume romanesti cu extensie pe co.uk? cum poti targeta astea in google
    1 point
  10. Sediul SRI intr-o zi obisnuita de duminica: Sediul SRI dupa ce a aparut "Despre clonarea de carduri" pe RST
    1 point
  11. -1 points
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