Built a CLI security tool that turns raw scan output into actual insights
→ No API keys
→ Local AI (SLM)
→ Clean UX (no noisy terminal junk)
→ One command setup
Just run:
./install.sh
./threatmap
Would love feedback
https://t.co/H3epPJqSWP
Have you wondered why we see different HTTP versions on a single website while intercepting through Burp?
You’ll notice a few requests with HTTP/1.1 and some with HTTP/2 or HTTP/3 on the same site
What most cybersecurity beginners miss is that they don’t deep dive into how HTTP works.
Their entire AppSec depends upon it. So don’t miss it, and deeply understand the concepts of HTTP
Been trying to meet serious people in cybersecurity
Not just people who say “let’s build something” once and disappear a week later
who:
- think long term
- solving hard problems
- want to build systems/products/services
- and are willing to stay consistent through uncertainty
@Tech_p001 I think no
I am sad that I failed to get the entry level job
But ig if we keep on adapting us accordingly, then I don’t think AI could replace us
Cybersecurity is no longer a field where staying in one narrow lane for years is enough
To stay ahead:
- adapt fast
- understand AI
- learn continously
- build broad security awareness across offensive, defensive, cloud, and governance domains
Been quietly building this for a few months. https://t.co/thlIKyHSmL
ThreatMap — runs Nmap, Nuclei, Nikto, and gobuster in parallel → feeds output into a local AI model → generates structured HTML and Excel reports.
no cloud. no API keys. everything on device.
@sec_hub93028 If you think you can learn once and do the same job for years comfortably in cybersecurity, you are wrong. You’ll be easily replaced. In cybersecurity, you need continuous learning, with or without passion it doesn’t matter
@sec_hub93028 If you think you can learn once and do the same job for years comfortably in cybersecurity, you are wrong. You’ll be easily replaced. In cybersecurity, you need continuous learning, with or without passion it doesn’t matter