Cyber security general? What are some good resources online for learning things like reverse engineering, cryptography, pentesting, etc
bumping for interest
Why do useless people always think "cyber security" is an easy meal ticket?
Unless you mean running script kiddie shit with your kali linux, you have to learn software development before you can reverse engineer. Learning crypto means a lot of advanced math, logic, and some programming skills to learn.
Sorry to bust your bubble but it sounds like you watched too much CSI
bump for interest
>>51722902
This is /g/. I assume the ones that aren't smartphone shills have already taken a C/C++ course, multiple calculus courses and other logic related courses.
>>51722902
who said anything about it being easy? he just asked for recommendations on learning material
https://github.com/rpisec/mbe
>>51723028
This.
>>51722159
stanford online resource?
https://www.class-central.com/university/stanford?subject=cs
>>51722159
go look around on the deepweb, more info there.
>>51723083
holy shit anon this is very great
>>51722902
>encouraging English-speakers to give up on cybersecurity
It's like you're a Chinese agent just railing propaganda to prevent the U.S. from getting better at it.
I'm a computer forensic student at university. Below are recourses I use to practice and develop my skills.
- Hack this site - Really good site, do as many challenges as you can. Good to learn hacking and also where vulnerabilities come from etc
- Python challenge - Python is the main programming language forensics use. This is a good site to stretch and challenge you, if your new then don't use this site.
- Own research - Keep up to date with news and research words or concepts our unsure of and try and replicate them. Such as create a site with sql vulnerabilities and use sql injection. Buffer stack overflows. Ram recovery. Recovering deleted data. Regex. Mrb tables and how to manipulate them and also hide them. Encryption - AES - blowfish etc
Let me know if you want more information :)
>>51723271
>encouraging script kiddies to call themselves "cybersecurity experts"
No anon, you are the agent. This is how we get professional snake oil salesman peddling severely flawed systems because their income depends on it
>>51723271
>It's like you're a Chinese agent just railing propaganda to prevent the U.S. from getting better at it.
>U.S. getting better at it.
What resources/software should I use to be ~le special snowflake invisible~~?
hashcat and oclhashcat have been open sourced!
https://hashcat.net/forum/thread-4880.html
https://github.com/hashcat/
>>51722159
>>51722824
>Cyber security general? What are some good resources online for learning things like reverse engineering, cryptography, pentesting, etc
http://www.reddit.com/r/netsec/wiki/start
also, ask ##security and/or #r_netsec @ freenode