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69 items tagged "Community"
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14:59
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SecDocs
Authors:
Greg Newby Tags:
management Event:
Chaos Communication Camp 2011 Abstract: What motivates people to create and freely distribute their works? This presentation will draw on personal experience, research literature, and existing communities of those who build and give away. Open source software, hardware, community building. The presenter will draw upon over 20 years experience with Project Gutenberg, as well as numerous other activities in which the focus is on building (things, software, communities, infrastructure) and giving them away (free and open source software, free literature, and physical artifacts). What motivates individuals to spend thousands of hours -- often in detriment to time spent with family, work, or other endeavors -- on activity which is primarily devoted to the well being of other people? Often, other people who are not personally known. Is there overlap in motivations for online communities versus volunteerism at the local level? Can such behaviors be learned? What motivates people to create and freely distribute their works? This presentation will draw on personal experience, research literature, and existing communities of those who build and give away. Open source software, hardware, community building. Characterizations of different types of motivations, levels and types of involvement, and outcomes will be made. Anomalies will be identified between individual values and targeted community outcomes, along with their sometimes disastrous impact on community identity-building or planning. Different leadership styles, and their impacts on emerging communities of contributors, will be compared. The presentation will draw some conclusions about how it might be possible to foster altruism in such communities, and to encourage increased interests in their outcomes. The audience will be asked to contribute their own experiences, especially advice about what works and what doesn't work to foster new member involvement. What are impediments to personal time investment, to sharing common goals, and to taking leadership roles? What lifecycles, governance structures, and other characteristics of successful projects (both large and small scale) can we learn from? We have seen hugely beneficial projects of all types where communities sprung up to support the building of things, software and ideas; we also have many examples of projects which did not seem to achieve their goals. How might future builders learn from these past experiences?
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14:37
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SecDocs
Authors:
Greg Newby Tags:
management Event:
Chaos Communication Camp 2011 Abstract: What motivates people to create and freely distribute their works? This presentation will draw on personal experience, research literature, and existing communities of those who build and give away. Open source software, hardware, community building. The presenter will draw upon over 20 years experience with Project Gutenberg, as well as numerous other activities in which the focus is on building (things, software, communities, infrastructure) and giving them away (free and open source software, free literature, and physical artifacts). What motivates individuals to spend thousands of hours -- often in detriment to time spent with family, work, or other endeavors -- on activity which is primarily devoted to the well being of other people? Often, other people who are not personally known. Is there overlap in motivations for online communities versus volunteerism at the local level? Can such behaviors be learned? What motivates people to create and freely distribute their works? This presentation will draw on personal experience, research literature, and existing communities of those who build and give away. Open source software, hardware, community building. Characterizations of different types of motivations, levels and types of involvement, and outcomes will be made. Anomalies will be identified between individual values and targeted community outcomes, along with their sometimes disastrous impact on community identity-building or planning. Different leadership styles, and their impacts on emerging communities of contributors, will be compared. The presentation will draw some conclusions about how it might be possible to foster altruism in such communities, and to encourage increased interests in their outcomes. The audience will be asked to contribute their own experiences, especially advice about what works and what doesn't work to foster new member involvement. What are impediments to personal time investment, to sharing common goals, and to taking leadership roles? What lifecycles, governance structures, and other characteristics of successful projects (both large and small scale) can we learn from? We have seen hugely beneficial projects of all types where communities sprung up to support the building of things, software and ideas; we also have many examples of projects which did not seem to achieve their goals. How might future builders learn from these past experiences?
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12:01
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Hack a Day
Government leadership in Shanghai wants to build 100 community hackerspaces funded by the Chinese government. Each space will be at least 100 square meters, open 200 days a year, and come equipped with wood and metal lathes, saws, drills, grinders, mills, and more electronics than we can imagine. The official government statement (translated here) says [...]
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11:52
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SecDocs
Authors:
Anthony Lai Colin Ames Val Smith Tags:
exploiting Event:
Black Hat USA 2010 Abstract: China has become a major player in the security community in recent years. From numerous news articles regarding government, military and commercial spying, to high profile cases such as the recent attack on Google, the tools, research and hacking groups coming out of China are are high on everyone's radar. This talk will provide an analysis of the Chinese hacking community, including its capabilities, goals, and cultural differences as well as similarities. A deep technical analysis and reverse engineering of prominent Chinese tools and techniques will be provided as well. We will highlight specifics such as binary obfuscators, encryption, and specific stealth techniques in order to round out an, up til now, spotty picture about this formidible member of the security community.
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12:15
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Carnal0wnage
Today we've released the beta version (rough, rough version) of wXf by making the repository public. Over the last year we've worked on this code in an "on again - off again" fashion. Since we've started the project we've learned a lot. I know I've personally learned a ton about Ruby and Metaprogramming (check out Paola Perrotta's book if you get a chance). We've rewritten the code several times but we've reached the point where it is at least stable enough to release. Now others have the chance to improve on it.
We've gotten loads of feedback from the beta group (consisting of a few volunteers) which has helped us tremendously with some of the usability and documentation. Additionally, we've started to gauge what people do and do not want to see. We know that the AppSec community doesn't want another point and click tool and certainly doesn't need another scanner.
The biggest question posed to us over the last 11 months was "Why not merge with (insert framework here)". The answer is actually incredibly simple and is the basis for why we created the software. We'd like the community of testers/consultants/developers/etc to decide what they want to see most.
To have the ability to adapt an entire framework to the user base and change it as needed is only feasible if we a) have total flexibility in modifying ANY portion of the code and b) aren't pigeonholed into just one area of focus (exploitation, scanning).
Whether it be source code review, exploitation, enumeration, fuzzing modules, phishing, mobile appsec or whatever else.......... we'd like to glue together some of the ideas and scripts of the community at large. So please contribute. Submit bugs, provide feedback, help with the wiki or develop modules. Every little bit counts.
wXf GitHub PageThanks!
Ken
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6:19
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remote-exploit & backtrack
Salve a tutti la discussione che sto aprendo e' solo a livello di curiosita.
Vorrei sapere se mai qualcuno e' riuscito a cracckare la wpa di alice(24 caratteri) o quella di fastweb(10 caratteri).Io mi sono arreso,almeno riguardo la wpa di alice,perche' penso che sia impossibile indovinarla con un dizionario casuale o un brute force con crunch.forse la strada migliore e' quella della retroingegnerizzazione.....arte alquanto difficile da intraprendere.Ci sarebbe solo un tizio di nome saxdax che e' riuscito,a detta di altri, a risalire tramite l' ssid della rete alla wpa standard del router di alice.Riguardo a quella di fastweb l'impresa con l'aiuto di pyrit potrebbe essere fattibile.
Voi cosa ne pensate?
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5:45
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remote-exploit & backtrack
Bonjour à tous.
je suis nouveau sur le site donc pas tres vaillant.
pour faire court mon probleme est tout simplement que je n'arrive pas a lancer l'interface graphique de "wicd" quand je clic sur celle-ci rien ne ce passe je ne peut alors pas detecter ma box qui est a proximité.
j'ai bien éssayé les commande ifconfig iwconfig les aimon-ng et autre mais sans succé .
je remercie d'avance les spécialiste.
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14:00
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remote-exploit & backtrack
Bonjour à tous,
je voulais savoir si il existe des dictionnaires pré-installé dans backtrack 4.
En effet je cherche un dictionnaire complet qui me permettrai de tester ma livebox :-)