
hacking
Get flash to fully experience Pearltrees
How to Hack: Ethical Hacking and Cyber Security | Go Hacking - Part 2
Free Portable Software to Carry with you on a USB Flash Drive Reviewed and categorized Free Portable Software , Portable Freeware , and Open Source Portable Applications that can be stored and run directly from a USB Flash Drive. Bring your office applications, email, web browser, instant messaging software, games, graphical editors, media player, anti virus software, recovery tools, encryption utilities, P2P file sharing utilities and more with you. Most, but not all of these third party portable apps were created by their authors with the ability to be run entirely from the portable device, saving your personal settings and changes back to the same device. nPOP is a Portable and Free Email Client created by Nakashima Tomoaki. This tiny Free Email Software program allows you [...]
Free Portable Software USB Flash Drive Applications | Pendriveapps
PirateBox DIY - David Darts Wiki
ANDREW PENG » Blog Archive » Ugly shell scripting
Recently I developed a strange wear pattern on my car’s front passenger side tire (that’s front rightside tire for those driving on the “wrong” side”) – the outer surface of the tire was warn almost completely bald while the inside treat was fresh and meaty. This was rather odd, as I recently had the car re-aligned with zero toe and max negative camber, which comes out to around -1.6 on both sides. Later I found that as a result of this slight adjustment, I had been pushing the car a lot more aggressively while driving to and from work. The downside of this, as I retraced my steps, is that my drive home from work is almost entirely left turns.Taking USB Attacks To The Next Level - Evil Bytes Blog - Dark Reading
USB devices have many benign, legitimate uses. But put a USB-based device in the hands of a savvy hardware hacker, and that USB device can go from good to evil in no time.Fellow Dark Reading blogger Gadi Evron's recent blog about USB-based attacks with keyboards gave an interesting attack scenario of using a hacked keyboard, Notepad, and custom shellcode to exploit a system. But who needs shellcode when you have a keyboard device? I mentioned a couple of very interesting hardware hacking presentations given this summer that took USB attacks to the next level. One focused on hacking wireless presentation devices that are no more than USB Human Interface Devices (HID) to the underlying system.Threat by Anonymous to take down the Internet by a reflected DDoS attack against the DNS root name servers , Pastebin posting, February 12, 2012 Operation Payback cripples MasterCard site in revenge for WikiLeaks ban , by Esther Addley and Josh Halliday, The Guardian, December 8, 2010 Randal Vaughn and Gadi Evron released an analysis of DNS Amplification Attacks (which use distributed reflection and amplification) on March 17, 2006 Distributed reflected DDoS attacks are covered on pages 19-20, 45, 51-52, and 297 in Internet Denial of Service: Attack and Defense Mechanisms , published in 2005 Vern Paxson wrote a paper, An Analysis of Using Reflectors for Distributed Denial-of-Service Attacks , warning of these kinds of attacks in June 2001 A DNS reflection attack on Register.com was publicly discussed in a thread on the UNISOG mailing list in January 2001.

