I know this will sound very cringey to many of you but what skills and knowledge do you think a very good...

I know this will sound very cringey to many of you but what skills and knowledge do you think a very good hacker/exploiter should have?

I remember reading years ago about Geohot breaking down very well built machines and codes like a baller.

Other urls found in this thread:

unix.stackexchange.com/questions/281425/does-tails-os-have-binary-blobs-in-its-kernel
youtube.com/watch?v=g6tuepmUmJg
twitter.com/NSFWRedditImage

Lock your terminal when unattended. Eat less sugar, eat more vegetables.

What's the deal with tails? They claim to be private and shit but they still use binary blobs in the Linux kernel.

read how DPR got snagged

unix.stackexchange.com/questions/281425/does-tails-os-have-binary-blobs-in-its-kernel

To be able to perform things the automated tools can't. To be patient and remain silent.

Ok but, what programming languages would one have to know? What should he focus his knowledge on?

>k but, what programming languages would one have to know? What should he focus his knowledge on?

All possible languages. Never know when you need to read something.
Main focus should go on OS and protocol knowledge.

OS you say? what abouy networks and security though? shouldn't that be the main focus?

buy the metasploit book and do the exercises / use the tools. you'll find a lot to learn with just that.

Not OP
Doesn't metasploit only teach you surface knowledge?
>OS and protocol knowledge
Is The Art of Exploitation a good starting point? What about Hacking Exposed?

Stop pasting first link from search engine. My question was Tails has binary blobs. How can someone trust it? The link just says tails has binary blobs.

A PHD in computer science.

Everyone else are just retards mindlessly trying stuff and sometimes getting lucky.

You need to know how things work and if you don't have a degree you don't know how these things work, simple as that.

>you need a PhD to be a security expert

*you need to a PHD to be a good security expert

OP here, i just want to be a disney crackerino.

Somewhat on these lines :
youtube.com/watch?v=g6tuepmUmJg

...

No, you don't, most security professionals don't have a PhD. What gave you this idea?
A CS PhD is useful in fields such as AI, systems engineering and perhaps data science. Not security. You're better off getting certs.

...

For the same reason the tor browser has JS enabled by default

What's the point of this? Can't see any of the links in the article when it's a fucking image.

>Getting certs
Lmao there aren't any certs for real security
VR is the creme de la creme of security, followed by the other offensive suites (not pentesting, pentesting is skid shit based off running other people's tools)

>running other people's tools

Yeah hold on, let me re-invent the wheel...

yeah, and those people writing those tools are far more skilled than people just using them
how can you even compare them

>phd is muh secret club that teaching magic not available to other sources
Let me remind you that internetz exist

i never said that
you don't need a degree to do VR

I dont want to open a new thread and i think this should be fine.

I live in germany and the government will spy on us (just passed on a new law regarding infecting citizen's pcs with trojan horses).
Bought bitdefender and now looking for a good vpn.
Is IPVanish as good as it gets? It's in the us which is a cons but otherwise?

yeah, but it's a good way to get your feet wet. a lot cheaper than paying for some college only to find out that you hate it.

Neither you need degree to hack or do anything my friend who had bachelor in cs could not write euclidean algirithm

>there aren't any certs for real security
What do you call real security? What about certifications like CEH, CCNA and stuff like that?
What is VR?

I want to get into infosec, but I'm a filthy casual atm

Install gentoo

>What is VR?
visual rasic

is malware analysis a good stepping stone for VR?

Vulnerability research, finding 0day and then selling it to the government
Yeah, it will teach you assembly and some tricks that attackers use, but you're going to have to branch off if you really want to do VR
Some contractors will hire you as long as you understand assembly and conceptually understand exploitation, and you can learn to do real vr from that

I see, thanks.

I'm an undergraduate CS student right now, and about a year out from getting my degree. I have a basic knowledge of x86 assembly, and I'm trying to learn about reverse engineering and software vulnerabilities right now.

If possible, could you give me a list of books (or even a list of specific topics) to start reading to become better at the low-level concepts needed for vuln research? Assuming I have a basic knowledge of x86 assembly, C, sockets programming, and the linux programming api, where should I start?

Basically this

>(just passed on a new law regarding infecting citizen's pcs with trojan horses).

bullshit?! proof?

Now post the "How to Tell if Your Son is a Hacker" one.