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Messages - dimi

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1
News and Announcements / Re: New Global Mod and Some News
« on: February 29, 2016, 11:38:27 am »
So essentially, there are no checks in place to stop a mod from silencing anything they don't personally agree with? Doesn't sound like a terribly good way to allow for diversity in view points.

I don't have the impression that people are being silenced very fast.  The stupid topics (which even I find stupid) are fast closed and put in the board of shame. All other topics get a chance of evolving in a good topic.

I think the mods are tolerant enough.

This said, I also went looking (through tapatalk) to other forums about hacking. I was a bit curious. For exemple ISA hacking crew and offensive community.  I find this forum (evilzone) much more mature than the other 2. They are much more bloaty and most of the postings are of a low quality. Often just spam to be honest.
Lately, I haven't check the other 2 forums anymore (did it for 3days or so), but evilzone I check every day .I'm not able to reply every time (don't want to spam) but I do read as much as I can.


Enough cock-sucking for now,I'm getting emotional  ;)

2
Beginner's Corner / Re: Creating cheat sheets
« on: February 29, 2016, 11:10:57 am »
I personally don't see a problem here, but apparently you do, and as this is one of the less idiotic threads, I'll answer:

You don't have to know everything. Common stuff gets into your head pretty fast if you use it often. The rest... well use it more often and it will fall into category 1. For instance, read a bit about DNS and get to know the internals of your box by experimenting etc. (a VM might be a good idea here as well).

As of notekeeping... I use plaintext files written in markdown (look it up) and some custom tools to work with them, but any setup with plain text works fine (develop one yourself maybe?).

Hope that clears up the situation.

First, sorry for replying so late, i didn't have much free time lately.

Indeed, I find it usefull to have a cheat sheet or other document that helps me to find structure in the chaos. I make summarys all the time, but the cheat sheet is more approriate (cleaner) for commands, in my opinion.

You are right about the plaintext. I looked up the markdown language (wikipedia). It seems to be handy and have a sort of easy learning curve. I will give it a try one day.

You made me realize that old school documents may do the trick as wel instead of putting time in cheat sheets. This will give me time to learn things instead of making fancy cheats.


I don't see them as commands. every tasks requires a different tool and thats the way I like to think about it.
Even after years I find myself using help and man quite often.
Also most commands have a very sensible name and so do the options which is pretty consistent  the result is that you can use the same flags for many different tools, the  '-v'  makes a good example.
Autocompletion is something you have to hammer into your brain, use tab  for everything , if it doesnt do anything make sure you hit frequently and with increasing force, you shall complete! I am making it sound like a joke but I am serious , I see many newbies typing  , I get tired by even looking at it.
That said, ZSH is my main shell and it makes life a whole lot easier , eventhough I think beginners should learn BASH first ZSH adds some extra dimensions, for example scrolling with tab over items is a great feature.
If it works for you do make a cheatsheet but I would encourage you to learn by doing and seeing the logic behind seemingly random letters and commands.
Also those commands you posted show me that you wanna jump to the fancy shit before learning to walk , start with file operations / networking / service mgmt etc.

I also use the tab key very often, it speeds up my typing. The man pages are pretty unused by me. I use the wiki pages and online information that I found.
I do recognize I do monkey work that way and will not learn it by myself.

The common commands are known but the more specific ones are indeed more difficult to remember.

I already did about 6 times an install of arch (the monkey way, I admit). That way, I know almost now out of my head what I have to do.

It is tempting to go fast with all those tools installed. I finally was able to install blackarch on top of my existing arch. It is tempting then to quickly see what a program can do.

I intend to install a msata and new hd and will do a new install of arch. That time I won't install all the blackarch tools but just that one that I want to learn.

I now use terminator for my commands, ZSH seems to difficult for now.

I do read a lot, but it is difficult to remember, especially the commands.

Bottomline: I'm not gonna put time in the cheat sheet, I'm just gonna write it down in a basic document. And I'm gonna use the man command more often. I hope the monkey way will not be needed anymore. And I'm gonna learn one program /tool / goal at a time.

Thank you TheWormKill and proxxx

3
Beginner's Corner / Creating cheat sheets
« on: February 25, 2016, 09:36:53 am »
Hello:

[Problem]
I'm learning a lot the last time but it's getting too much to remember all the commands. I made a how to for myself for the install of arch and configuring, but for the commands of for eg airmon or iw i would like to create a cheat sheet.

[Background]
I've learned many commands but have it heard to remember.

[Things I have tried]
Install cribr in Arch with wine. Was no success. Installed cribr in Windows, doesn't look good.

I've been looking for alternatives but I don't trust all the online options (some of them force you to publish your cheat sheet).

Latex is named as an option on several internet website, but it seems to have a steep learning curve. As I'm now finally learning other things, I would like to learn Latex as a last thing.

[Where I am stuck]

How do you guys remember all those different commands? I know man exists but knowing the commands is much faster.

What or how do you guys keep track off all your know commands?

I'm not talking about installing or configuring things, I have a how to for this, but about the commands like iw, airmon, knowing you should change /etc/resolv.conf for NS, etc..

I don't have a problem with sharing my finally created cheat sheet, but as I'm very beginning I don't know you could use it  :)


4
General discussion / Re: Subway Slasher Crimes in NYC
« on: February 23, 2016, 01:31:20 pm »
You need to have the time to take your defense weapon. Otherwise you cant use it. Sometimes running away is better. Hairspray or deodorant spray are legal.

5
Anonymity and Privacy / Re: short anonymity/privacy guide
« on: February 19, 2016, 08:46:18 pm »
The real problem is at the end we want to search everything at google[emoji14]
Duckduckgo then?

6
Hacking and Security / Re: 24 Hour Hack - 99 000'th post
« on: February 18, 2016, 04:14:10 pm »
I have a, for the moment, unused vsphere server. It has a octacore atom processor, very low power usage. Problem is it is attached to my network and since it is a hacking game, i don't want my other computers to be hacked 😃.

So, i'm willingly to let this be used in the future, but some guys must help me setting up the dmz 😃.


7
Hacking and Security / Re: 24 Hour Hack - 99 000'th post
« on: February 17, 2016, 10:48:47 pm »
Im interested too. Maybe create different kinds of levels or mix the groups

8
Operating System / Re: OS Advice?
« on: February 16, 2016, 12:29:51 pm »
I too recommended arch. It is difficult to start but eventually you will learn a lot and have a stable working distro. Stable untill an update breaks something. But it is pretty fast repaired. I will go with arch from now. Have a new second hand laptop and i will install arch on it. It is very very well documented. Debian is good too.

9
Hardware / Re: Intel Mini ATX build ideas
« on: February 13, 2016, 06:38:46 pm »
Set it up as a nas with openmediavault (i am told freenas is much more difficult to recover in case of a crash), make it a htpc if hdmi connection, make a game emulator for old games?
A small server for vpn or file server?
Plenty of possibilities 😃

10
Hardware / Re: Advice on laptop solely linux
« on: February 10, 2016, 02:19:50 pm »
Little update. The t420 or 420s is out of play.

It will be a t520 or t530. Both have i7 and 8gb ram. No ssd but cant have it all.
They have a dedicated gpu so that was the idea.

I dropped the t4's because some people complained about heating issues.

Will keep you posted for the final deal 😉

//modify:
I made the decision. It is the T520.
 ThinkPad T520 Intel Core i7 2640M / 2,8 GHz, 8GB RAM , 500GB HD ,
W-LAN, UMTS, Fingerprint, Webcam, 15,6 LED-HD+, DVD±RW (±R DL) / DVD-RAM, nvidia 4200 and intel HD 3000.
I think this will do.
Things to replace / add are the keyboard (it's german layout now, need azerty), add an m-sata ssd, buy new 9cel battery, see for external hd.

The 530 had backlit tough, but a I5 cpu.
Now waiting for the delivery

11
Hardware / Re: Advice on laptop solely linux
« on: February 05, 2016, 07:12:35 am »
Thank you for the input guys. I was also leaning forward to lenovo. The x201 has a similar size as the hp i currently own.

I think i'll go for the t. Now have to decide which one. Apparently the ts has some heating issues due to its smaller size.

I will upgrade it to 8gb. The upgrade is not so expensive.

Thank you for the advice!

12
Hardware / Advice on laptop solely linux
« on: February 03, 2016, 10:39:32 pm »
Hello everyone,

I'm looking to buy a second hand laptop.

I already have one, this one would be used to learn hacking and programming. I would take it with me to work.

I dont know whether i should take an onboard gpu or not. This will cost some battery performance. But with a gpu i'm not limited when i want to learn decryption and so on.

I know there is vidock for egpu.

I'm interested in the following laptops

Hp2170p. A 11 inch laptop. I5, 8gb and 1tb hdd. No dedicated gpu

Hp 8560w. A 15.6 inch laptop, i5,4g and 320hd. Nvidia gpu. Cuda score 2.1

Lenovo t420s. I7, 4gb, 128ssd. Nvidia gpu. Cuda score 2.1

Lenovo t420. Same specs but 500gb hd.

Lenovo x201. I7. 8gb and 128ssd. No dedicated gpu.

Dell e6420. I5, 4gb and 250gb hdd.nvidia gpu cuda 2.1

The Lenovo s with gpu have nvidia optimus. I learned this may give some problems with linux. Bumblebee etc should be the solution.

The cuda score is decent on all gpu integrated.

The laptop will solely use linux. Dont know yet which os though.

Fyi i now own a 2570p. I5, 12gb ram, 2 ssd onboard. I dont want to keep taking this one with me all the time. To expensive to lose or get stolen. Use this one for vm etc.

Wireless chipset is no problem. Would change the onboard or use my tplink stick.

I 'm happy with the upgradeability of the elitebook and its quality. The lenovo quality is also good. Their keyboard would be very good as i've read.
I also own a dell. Hasnt let me down till now.

So.difficult choices.

My budget is max 500euro. That should be the uber laptop price 😃 been looking on ebay for weeks now. 400 should do it too...

Any advice?

So basically, a good laptop for hacking (decryption from time to time), programming +)and seeing movies

Thank you for your help!


13
News and Announcements / Re: Board restrictions to new members
« on: February 03, 2016, 09:09:26 pm »
I didnt join the forum for the ebooks. They are nice but eventually you will find a particular ebook in the internet when you want it. I joined it because i want to learn things. Because i know nothing i dont contribute much. But what i do is appreciate all your efforts for this site. I know it costs you guys money and it is your project besides your everyday stuff. Anyhow. If things change, i would definitely do my best to get in the evilzone again. I'm often astonished by the intelligence of some (very few) of the guys and girls who put their energy in this site. I think you dont realize how smart you are. This said, the beginners questions may seem very easy for you. The problem is the smart ones play in the first league and the beginners in amateur league. Everyone had to learn once.

I think that a small test to get in may shift the leechers, so zombie is right. But it also may not.. But when you never try, you will never know. I think you guys are smart enough to find a solution.

14
General discussion / Re: Where are you from?
« on: January 29, 2016, 09:19:32 pm »
The hellhole belgium. Capital of jihadism...

15
Operating System / Re: So I installed Arch
« on: January 28, 2016, 09:55:20 pm »
Don't dual boot it.
Why not blindfuzzy? I'm not very good yet in arch and i need windows sometimes. What is wrong with dual boot than?

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