No, it’s just the number of a specific signal.
No, it’s just the number of a specific signal.
Look, that you’re used to the garbage UI doesn’t change that it’s garbage and in dire need of a fundamental revamp. If almost everyone here (and everywhere else) says that it sucks or is intransparent, then YOU may be the odd one out here ;)
Imagine hating usable software you don’t need a PhD for. It’s kinda pathetic to make this your point of pride.
Thank you for clearing it up!
And regarding your assessment: Exactly!
I had a colleague at work years ago who did his Master’s thesis on network scanning. He ran a PoC in the company’s network and had all the printers print hundreds of pages.
We learned that printers suck and that we should always know our payloads and targets 😁
You need Administrative permissions for psexec. It uploads a file to the target computer’s \admin$ share (just C:\Windows) and starts a service to execute it. Services run as SYSTEM so that’s why you get those privileges.
(Hah, I forgot your message while typing mine and just copied you :)
Edit: fixed c$ to admin$
Because it’s still in development, but afaik it is the goal to include it once it’s stable.
Check out openvas.
https://github.com/greenbone/openvas-scanner
I use Nessus professionally, they are somewhat similar. I can’t decide which one has the worse user interface.
I’m a big fan of hashcat for this use case myself! I route it through WS, however. I like being on the bleeding edge.
I approach interviews for penetration testing positions in the same way, just with hacking challenges!
Still trips me up from time to time after all these years!
Only PHP programmers post something like this as an image! 😘
Have you thought about e-ink readers? There are ones you can write/draw with, and since I got mine I completely skip paper!
Not Ruby sure what you’re saying, but I dream of getting strangled by a Python that can’t C#. 🤤
Sure, look up specific configuration points or architectures, but looking up AD is a bad sign.
Have fun exploring! I just have a simple Raspberry Pi at home with a few services, after working with this stuff all the time I rarely feel like tinkering at home :D