Today, I took on my first real digital forensics case study, the NIST “Mr. Evil” hacking case.
A 2004 abandoned laptop… a homemade Wi-Fi antenna… and a suspected hacker.
My task is to find out if the owner was really a hacker.
Follow me 😁💚... @_Rega_n@RedHatPentester
Today, I took on my first real digital forensics case study, the NIST “Mr. Evil” hacking case.
A 2004 abandoned laptop… a homemade Wi-Fi antenna… and a suspected hacker.
My task is to find out if the owner was really a hacker.
Follow me 😁💚... @_Rega_n@RedHatPentester
Digital forensics is not magic, it’s patience, method, and knowing where evidence hides.
And honestly… the investigator mindset is starting to set in.
Every command… every plugin… every inode tells a story.
I'm built for this! 💚🖤
@_Rega_n@akintunero@RedHatPentester
Then came the install date.
I explored multiple registry plugins, extracted them all, searched through with Leafpad, and located the exact timestamp.
Finally, I traced the computer account name, confirming who the system belonged to. 💚🕵♂️
@_Rega_n@elormkdaniel
DNS spoofing this week... and wow. 😬🔥
I watched forged DNS replies reroute client traffic in real time. ARP fools the LAN; DNS fools the world if you let it.
Stay curious. Verify everything. 🔍💚
@_Rega_n@akintunero@RedHatPentester
I worked on ARP spoofing and MITM attacks. It is interesting how a small trick in your network’s ARP table can redirect traffic without anyone noticing. I simulated the attack and watched how a system can be deceived into trusting the wrong device.
@_Rega_n@akintunero