It would be silly if NSA didn't. After all this is the number one comfiest general on Jow Forums.
Oh, and I came across a cache of latex cybergoth pictures I planned to share. Promotions for everyone!
Easton Price
anyone here listening to skinny puppy/fla/godflesh rn? watching fla live wired 2.0
Jace Hill
Cyberpunk has nothing to do with cybersecurity.
Jaxson Wilson
=== /cyb/ News: Via Slashdot >Wireless 'Pacemaker For the Brain' Could Offer New Treatment For Neurological Disorders (sciencedaily.com) science.slashdot.org/story/19/01/02/226223/wireless-pacemaker-for-the-brain-could-offer-new-treatment-for-neurological-disorders >Engineers at the University of California, Berkeley, have developed a new neurostimulator that can listen to and stimulate electric current in the brain at the same time, potentially delivering fine-tuned treatments for patients with diseases like epilepsy and Parkinson's.
David Richardson
where any of you fucks even alive when these bands were relevant at least you aren't listening to synthwave
Isaac Garcia
Sure I was alive then. I just preferred Alphaville.
John Myers
rip my 90s mixtapes on actual tapes
James Powell
I was thinking, and I realised that when cyborgs become a real, big thing they're probably going to end up being part of SJW bullshit and there's gonna be all sorts of shit about how you can't be bigoted against cyborgs. Maybe it'd even happen to human-like androids if you want to think that far ahead
Alexander Butler
Throw sex bots into that mix and watch the issue explode.
Brandon Powell
What poses less risks? Using ntld like .one or a country cctld like .nz?
I feel like cctlds offer better price stability. You never have to worry about a county disappearing or being bought or hiking the price for no reason. While ntlds have a transfer lock. So stealing the domain becomes less viable. But the future of ntlds are filled with uncertainty.
Oliver Wright
>You never have to worry about a county disappearing .su
Dominic Martin
(you) should remove /cyb/ and add /netsec/ along with /sec/. it will make better sense
Grayson Williams
cyb is now, sec is universal
Colton Bailey
You are late. Did OP find you and wake you up?
Jaxon Morris
As a low tech hacking I am not sure I know but maybe The Art and Science of Dumpster Diving by John Hoffman has some general tips.
As an alternative you can go to ham fests where hams sell various old stuff (or junk). The advantage is that it is unlikely to be damaged from being thrown into a dumpster.
Andrew Morales
How do I get a job that deals with security, outside of the US? All I can get here is sysadmin, network admin and stuff, which is not really cybsec. Seems like working for the government would be the only way, but Im not an US citizen.
Liam Richardson
Depends on the country but I have noticed a sharp upturn in recruitment in intelligence agencies in a lot of the Western countries. A lot of those deal in networking, telecom, malware and security generally.
Or you could go the military route.
Isaac Walker
Here in the Netherlands I see many security related traineeships. Which are mostly sold as privacy / security consultants since the gdpr.
Hunter Hughes
real cyberpunks prefer the wired version
Jack Sanders
I like it, and could see myself doing it, but the pay is just so low here, compared to a web/software developer. That's because the only jobs would be for the government.
Dominic Young
Crypto skills are hard to find and thus well paid also in government positions.
Kayden Diaz
Random question : Why is KALI Linux never mentioned on here? Not necessarily on /cyb/ or /sec/ but on Jow Forums in general?
Carter Green
It is if you bothered to read the links in the OP. The ones in the sticky? I don't know why more people don't learn them, if they're publicly available. Or do you mean crypto skills such as math and algebra?
Kevin Moore
timestamp and tits or gtfo
Jackson Nelson
Is mentioned from time to time, the answer is the same: is just debian with an extra repository and specific tweaks like root by default, not good for day to day tho
Samuel Morgan
Can I get tips here on how to deal with cracking passwords using hashcat or is this a wrong general to be asking such questions.
Brayden Rivera
It is generally derided as a skiddie tool and nothing more. It’s a good place to start though
Charles Cruz
This might be a dumb question so don't grill me, but if I'm a CS undergrad is it worth going to graduate school to study networks and security even further? Would it actually help or should i just go into the industry?
Camden Flores
well, what is your question?
Lucas Perez
So I'm trying to crack my own wifi password as a pen test, I got kali linux, got the wpa handshake and now the tough part trying to crack the password, obviously I know my own password but I'm pretending I'm not, so I've tried using classic rockyou.txt with best64 rule but that was unable to crack it, I have bigger dictionaries one has 2gb from hashes org and some other one that's 20gb but those will take forever to run on my hardware with best64 ruleset which is I assume what I should be trying if I were trying to hack a WPA key for real or am I going in a totally wrong direction? What should be my steps to successfully crack the hash or maybe my expectations should be that I shouldn't be able to successfully hack one?
Isaac Myers
this is the shittest larpfag thread, they don't watch it. Until recently you guys had a fucking discord in the OP
Parker Phillips
It depends on a couple more factors.. But in general password cracking should be the last thing you try in a real world scenario. That is because, as you said, it takes a very long time if you don't have dedicated hardware. (even then it might take ages) What would be a better use of your time would be to learn how to capture, de-auth and phish. MITM is a very strong tool if it's used correctly. Layer 8 is the easiest way to get access to anything.
But if you only want to know how to crack passwords then I suggest you read up on rainbow tables/hash tables and router default salts. I also suggest learning how the authentication works on a more fundamental level. You might find a thing or two that surprises you...
Ayden Morgan
Well, like I thought I was going ass backwards, that helps user time to learn new stuff, thanks.
Adam Wilson
actually cracking a password probably isn't the best idea, could take an incredibly long time
Dylan Ward
What's some ways to point EIP to the stack if I can't find any JMP ESP's or CALL ESP's to use
Matthew Davis
Well since I have 1080 ti and there's gpu acceleration I thought I had ample processing power, boy how wrong was I, for reference processing 20gb dictionary with rule64 would take like 3 days with no guarantee of success.
Nolan Hall
>Or do you mean crypto skills such as math and algebra? I meant maths and the specialised skills relating to crypto. It ended up as a a national matter here at parliamentary level.
Landon Reed
You know, if you think about it. One day if we keep asking this, we will get tits and time stamp from a fed.
It's just a matter of time..
Parker Carter
>One day if we keep asking this, we will get tits and time stamp from a fed. Right. But would you want that? After all it is 90 percent chance it is a dude.
Jackson Bennett
I used to think cyberpunk was gay but then I watched Serial Experiments Lain and now I like it.
I like blade runner so that's a start. I'll check out the others you mentioned. If Lain isn't cyberpunk then what is it?
Anthony Jones
Lain is abstract sci fi and cyberpunk inspiration tho.
Jason Perry
Lain /is/ Cyb, it is just Japanese Cyb. The FAQ has a long list of suggestions. Just think twice before viewing Tetsuo the Iron man. That is revolting Japanese Cyberpunk set to Japanese death metal "music". Don't worry about subtitles or dubbing, continuous screaming is the same in any language.
/cyb/ Movies: >The Machine (2013) >Johnny Mnemonic (1995) >The Matrix (1999) >Chappie (2015) >Elysium (2013) >Virtuosity (1995) >The Lawnmower Man (1992) >Lawnmower Man 2: Beyond Cyberspace (1996) >The Terminator (1984) >Blade Runner (1982) >TRON (1982) >TRON: Legacy (2010) >Escape from New York (1981) >Escape from L.A. (1996) >Rollerball (2002)
/sec/ Movies: >Sneakers (1992) >The Net (1995) >Takedown (2000) >The Fifth Estate (2013) >Blackhat (2015) >Enemy of the State (1998) >Hackers (1995) >WarGames (1983) >WarGames: The Dead Code (2008)
Jow Forums Movies: >Disconnect (2012) >Antitrust (2001) >Pirates of Silicon Valley (1999) >Office Space (1999) >Her (2013)
/cyb/ Documentaries: >The Cyberpunk Educator archive.org/details/cyberpunkeducator >The Internet's Own Boy: The Story of Aaron Swartz (2014) >RiP: A Remix Manifesto (2009) >TPB AFK: The Pirate Bay Away from Keyboard (2013) >The Net - The Unabomber, LSD and the Internet (2003)
/sec/ Documentaries: >Hackers: Wizards of the Electronic Age (1984) >Hackers Wanted aka Can You Hack It ( (2009) >New York City Hackers (2000) >We Steal Secrets: The Story of WikiLeaks (2013) >Citizenfour (2014) >Terms and Conditions May Apply (2013) >All Watched Over by Machines of Loving Grace (2011)
Jow Forums Documentaries: >The Code (2001) >Revolution OS (2001) >BBS: The Documentary (2005) >Get Lamp (2010) >From Bedrooms to Billions (2014)
A command. Run it. Make sure you have mpv installed.
Colton White
I am watching the cyberpunk educator, I'll do it later
Blake Bell
which firewall do you guys use?
Zachary Moore
iptables
Joshua Collins
what do you do with it
Alexander Wright
nftables is in everything now (well, except maybe CentOS 7) and it really is much nicer. Supposedly it performs better on large rulesets also.
Julian Ortiz
What do you anti-fuckos think about Cybrary to try and aid me with some certs? I'm 21 and wagecuckin it but I'm trying to see if some certs can help me get somewhere, be it freelancing wise or other
Jason Richardson
i remember checking out cybrary. i don't remember being impressed. which cert?
Aaron Allen
adding to Op because good
Caleb Jenkins
nvm too long rip
Blake Sanders
Thinking of doing N+, S+, and some other cert that are related with networking and security. I haven't checked out to see if there are any certification related to social engineering as it's also one of my interests
Jaxson Garcia
FortiGate with full deep SSL and layer 7 protection
Josiah White
Wasn't that already in the pasta?
William Anderson
And if I recall correctly a lot of people in the thread were getting pissed at him posting a discord link. One guy using the thread to shill his shitty server does not make us all larpfags. Even if we are, it's the comfiest thread on Jow Forums.
Asher Myers
yes, and it's now out of the pasta because it was too long
Daniel White
is The Expanse really /cyb/ or /sec/? I though it was Space Opera
Robert Scott
Definitely /cyb/, also sometimes space operas are pretty /cyb/
Brandon Hernandez
nop sleds
Ryder Lee
don't do it, literal cancer awaits on the other side.
Why is it every cyberpunk chinese cartoons has a female protagonist?
Ethan Hall
Hot gurls and L A T E X suits
Juan Evans
Does gsuite for business automatically use 2FA? I have creds to try. Additionally, are configuration backups usually a good source of credentials?
Zachary Howard
It has been part of the tropes ever since the beginning with Molly Millions and YT.
Brandon Lee
Can't have damsels in distress when everyone's too cynical to give a shit
Aaron Campbell
=== /cyb/ News: Life imitates art aned the world becomes one bit more /cyb/: >Talking horses and perfect faces: The rise of virtual celebrities bbc.com/news/entertainment-arts-46456610 >VTubers like Kaguya Luna and Kizuna AI aren't without precedent. In 2007, the Japanese media company Crypton Future decided it wanted a relatable character to be an image for its voice synthesiser software. The result was Hatsune Miku, a 16-year-old with turquoise pigtails that would go on to appear in various manga, anime and video games, and eventually appear "live" in concert as a hologram.
Yet, before that we had Kyoko Date, and well before that we had Rei Toei.
Owen Gray
>Johnny Mnemonic (1995) >I want room service! >I want a $10,000-a-night hooker! Seriously though that movie is shit.
Owen Green
The movie was destroyed in editing. Supposedly the Japanese cut is better. Seems it got better reviews from those who had not read the book beforehand.
Jackson Brooks
>man iptables >??? >profit
Justin Sanders
=== /sec/ News: A lot of espionage now involved network security: >Looking for China’s spies bbc.co.uk/news/resources/idt-sh/Looking_for_Chinas_spies >On 25 January 2014, the employee placed a USB stick into a computer at the French company. “The horse was planted this morning,” he texted the Chinese intelligence officer later that day, according to the US indictment.
>The next month, the company’s computers “beaconed”, contacting a web domain controlled by Chinese hackers. That came to the attention of the US which informed French intelligence. They contacted the company, which began to investigate. One may wonder how the US detected this, they are unlikely to tell much about that.
>But the hackers had an advantage. Another employee - an IT worker - at the company in China was working with them, it is alleged. Text messages were exchanged with the hackers and within hours the web domain being used was deleted to cover their tracks, according to the US indictment.
Samuel Jackson
Anyone know any good cybersecurity youtube channels?
Cooper Gray
>/cyb/ ftp: ftp://50.31.112.231/pub/ That one still exists but the preferred FTP is back and has a lot more contents as well as structure: ftp://collectivecomputers.org:21212/Books/Cyberpunk/[/code