How do I upskill myself to be able to do bug bounties? I have participated in many CTF competitions but I don’t know how well that skillset will transfer to bug bounties and if yes how to transfer it
How do I upskill myself to be able to do bug bounties? I have participated in many CTF competitions but I don’t know how well that skillset will transfer to bug bounties and if yes how to transfer it
Alright. Thanks a lot!
Oh okay. What devops/cloud job titles should I apply to for the switch to be easier? I am barely able to find 5 cybersec jobs :/
How difficult is it to switch from a devops or cloud role to a security role like network security, soc analyst or pentesting?
Thanks a lot!
What are some companies which will hire freshers in cyber security? I see many job posts which need experienced people but very few for entry level.
Oh that looks like a really good website. Thanks for sharing! :)
What are some good resources to learn for Network+ and Security+? I want to do Security+ but people have told me that it’ll need Network+ concepts too. So I’ll start learning with Network+.
tar --help
is a valid command :p
Check out Shelter. Iuse Shelter myself but I have heard that Insular does the same thing. Shelter has an option of installing from APK directly into work profile. I tried installing different versions just now and it worked.
Edit: Hadn’t properly read your post. Changed my reply to better fit the question
Oh okay thanks!
Desktop Linux allows root access and is still secure. Allowing root access doesn’t make it insecure.
Yeah I have read that. And couldn’t find any reason why. When I ask about root people only say "if you want root, graphene isn’t for you"😅
Yeah I’m currently running LineageOS. I wanted root mainly for adblock (modifying /etc/hosts
) and AppOps. Does Graphene have those features built in?
What is the root scene on Graphene? I know the dev is pretty against it but I like having root access after being used to it. Is it possible to easily root it without any integrity issues later on?
Is the source code available? I would like to see how auditors rate it’s security. Even if it’s not as good I would say it’s a step in the right direction.
Ah cool. I never had to use this myself but I always found it kind of cool. I guess it’s good I never had to use this lol.
Not ethical: If you have to submit assignments (like .docx
files) online and you haven’t finished it in time, take a random .docx
file and edit it in a text editor (like notepad) and add/delete some random stuff. You can send this file and the professor won’t be able to open it so you will get an extension by default.
Why not hash it client side? Edit: Isn’t SSL vulnerable to MITM attacks? (I am a noob in this field)
Thanks a lot. I’ll check both the sources as well!