@luckyhacker43 You have to check this book out, many people don't know it.
Methodologies + Attack Scripts including MFA/Passkeys bypasses for full ATO.
Thank me later.
@HildaGilbora@windhustler Go solo.
Test random Apps.
Find a bug.
Talk directly to the owners.
Explain to them what could happen if you happened to be a bad actor with your POC.
Negotiate with them for full disclosure and patches.
Target full ATO bugs (You can use Password Reset Techniques by Asmanov).
In this behind the scenes session, the team behind the Bug Bounty Village CTF at DEF CON 33, @CTFae, reveals how they built one of the most ambitious hybrid competitions ever created.
https://t.co/800wpa966m
When I started seriously getting into RFID security, the information landscape was a mess.
Forum threads from 2009 with broken links. Research papers behind paywalls. Knowledge sitting in private Slack channels and IRC rooms that you needed to already know someone to access. The people who knew things weren't being gatekeepers intentionally, the tooling just hadn't created a natural gathering point yet.
Then there was the Proxmark forum, the center of it all for a decade.
Not https, and overrun with spam. Haters flooded it with spam.
That's part of why the Discord server exists.
It's now the largest RFID hacking community online with members from 40+ countries, spanning everyone from published researchers presenting at DEF CON and Black Hat to people who received their first Proxmark3 last week and aren't sure which end to point at the card.
The mix is deliberate. Beginners ask the questions that experts stopped asking years ago. Those questions are often the most interesting ones. "Why does this card respond to `lf search` but not `hf search`?" leads to a surprisingly fun conversation about frequency, modulation, and why the protocol landscape is the way it is.
If you're into RFID, NFC, access control security, or hardware hacking in general, the door is open.
https://t.co/hFdVqHFHBC
#RFID #NFC #CyberSecurity #InfoSec #HardwareSecurity #Community #Proxmark3
https://t.co/WntjngoXW8
https://t.co/3ReVw9sAE4
Wi-Fi Evolution: From 2 Mbps to 46 Gbps!
From the early days of Wi-Fi 0 (802.11) in 1997 to the latest Wi-Fi 7 (802.11be), wireless technology has rapidly transformed how we connect, communicate, and build networks.
@MalwareJake@HardyViper You want a new wine in an old wineski?..agencies that colludes with the deep state?..new ones should even be created and the present ones discarded.