awesome-pentest
awesome-appsec
awesome-pentest | awesome-appsec | |
---|---|---|
31 | 6 | |
20,542 | 6,110 | |
- | 0.8% | |
5.0 | 0.0 | |
10 days ago | 8 months ago | |
PHP | ||
- | MIT License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
awesome-pentest
- Awesome Penetration Testing
- Career growth in cybersecurity
- Cyber Security Resources for All Levels
- Malware detectable by antivirus?
- A collection of awesome penetration testing resources, tools and other shiny things
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What should I use to hack on windows 10?
I guess you can start here and other GitHub repos: https://github.com/enaqx/awesome-pentest
- simulate Attack/check network security
- Giving away 2 Tryhackme 1 Month Vouchers
- can't find an entry level job that's actually entry level
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Cybersecurity Repositories
Pentest
awesome-appsec
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Aside from OWASP, are there other relevant certs to get for App Sec?
For resources : https://github.com/paragonie/awesome-appsec
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Cybersecurity Repositories
AppSec
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Resources to learn secure coding? App Sec and Web Sec?
Here is a repo of some resources. You are going to need to learn to walk before you run so that at a concrete level you can articulate what secure vs insecure code is and why it matters, then dive into appsec. No disrespect intended but from the way this is written my suggestion would be to focus on computer science foundational concepts as well as spending significant time writing and reading code. This will likely be a several year journey if you are a total beginner but the best time to start is now :)
- Information and learning resources for cryptography newcomers
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Anyone in AppSec (Application Security)?
Come over to /r/devsecops to get more information about the field. Also, there are lots of good sources, you can get some from my blog, or Awesome AppSec, or Security Prince and other places.
- I'm preparing for the interview and I've curated a list of resources that might be helpful for you also.
What are some alternatives?
awesome-nodejs - :zap: Delightful Node.js packages and resources
API-Security-Checklist - Checklist of the most important security countermeasures when designing, testing, and releasing your API
gobuster - Directory/File, DNS and VHost busting tool written in Go
UnSAFE_Bank - Vulnerable Banking Suite
SecLists - SecLists is the security tester's companion. It's a collection of multiple types of lists used during security assessments, collected in one place. List types include usernames, passwords, URLs, sensitive data patterns, fuzzing payloads, web shells, and many more.
see awesome-security - A collection of awesome software, libraries, documents, books, resources and cools stuffs about security.
SecurityExplained - SecurityExplained is a new series after the previous learning challenge series #Learn365. The aim of #SecurityExplained series is to create informational content in multiple formats and share with the community to enable knowledge creation and learning.
labs - This is a collection of tutorials for learning how to use Docker with various tools. Contributions welcome.
SecureCodingDojo - The Secure Coding Dojo is a platform for delivering secure coding knowledge.
Probable-Wordlists - Version 2 is live! Wordlists sorted by probability originally created for password generation and testing - make sure your passwords aren't popular!
Security_Engineer_Interview_Questions - Every Security Engineer Interview Question From Glassdoor.com