Continuing the streak of i0rs posts, we have another one by @__connar who investigated Speakeasy by @Mandiant and put together some bypasses for the framework. If you have seen Speakeasy deployed in the wild or are interested in its internals, check it out https://t.co/1hjB9EEl2F
Another i0rs post, this time from @0x3dward who takes it upon himself to write a POC for a recently discovered heap buffer overflow in PostgreSQL's pgcrypto leading to RCE, originally discovered by team @xint_official. Enjoy🤘🔥
https://t.co/EN9ICFv7jM
New i0rs post, this time from @freysolareye going into an SSRF vulnerability he found in @roundcube which gives attackers data exfiltration on the victim. An interesting read for red teamers before going into their next assessment👀 https://t.co/u4Hj0Pgr2m
We wanted to include something a bit exotic on i0rs that's eye-catching and a topic most people would like to dabble with ;). If you've ever thought of looking into lockpicking, @osorinidis made a great intro guide. https://t.co/NtQdcUYT7X
@feasto_ has delivered a deep technical dive into #React2Shell CVE-2025-55182, going into many facets of this critical vulnerability. Technical analysis and security landscape overviews, writeups like this is why we made i0rs. We hope you enjoy https://t.co/MtjDzmSMKu
r4sti dropped an article for i0rs, going into WinRAR License Verification internals. His research combines both crypto and reversing to make for an interesting read. Through this he even contributed to @sagemath . Check it out https://t.co/h3bMM5bLvq. Random tag @WinRAR_RARLAB
To be a good researcher, you must also believe in yourself. Yes, people way smarter and experienced than you have looked at this code. But there is hope your look will be the one to find a crown jewel.
It is possible only if you try.