awesome-tor
SQLMap
awesome-tor | SQLMap | |
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2 | 40 | |
396 | 30,623 | |
- | 0.9% | |
0.0 | 8.7 | |
8 months ago | 3 days ago | |
Python | ||
- | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
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-tor
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Tor is not just for anonymity
The internet is no longer as peer-to-peer friendly as it once was. Hence the existence of commercially-motivated hacks run by third parties such as hosting, e.g., Cloudflare, etc., including tunneling, e.g., ngrok, etc. Alternatively, Tor relies on third parties but AFAIK it's not so centralised and it's not commercially-motivated.
That is what differentiates it from all the other options. There is no company behind it trying to make money by exploiting internet subscribers trying to connect with each other (not the so-called "tech" company).
Tor can have uses other than the ones normally discussed such as anonymity and evading censorship. Tor can provide reachability without use of commercial eavesdropping third party intermediaries.
For example, one can use Onion Services for advertising open IP:port information that is needed for peer-to-peer connections over other, faster peer-to-peer overlay networks, not the Tor network. The Onion Service can function as the "rendezvous" server for making peer-to-peer connection outside of Tor. Tor's Onion Services can be used to exchange IP:port information for making direct connections over the internet without using Tor. No need to use commercial third parties. Ngrok, Tailscale, etc. all require use of servers run by a commercial third party. Tor does not. There is ample free software that can establish peer-to-peer connections over the internet but in every case it requires some reachable server running this software on the internet, and for most users that means they have to run a server and pay a commercial third party for hosting. Tor has no such requirement.
Imagine being able to share content with family, friends, colleagues without the need for so-called "tech" companies^1 acting as intermediaries ("middlemen"). With a reachable IPv4 address this becomes possible. It would be nice if every home internet access subscriber received a reachable IPv4 address from their ISP. No doubt, some do. But on today's internet most do not. The so-called "tech" companies all have reachable IPv4 addresses. Hence they assume the roles of middlemen and use this position to exploit internet subscribers for profit.
Something like Tor provides a solution. Again, it is not always necessary to route all traffic over Tor. Tor can have other uses. When the goal is simply peer-to-peer connections, Onion Services can be used to bootstrap peer-to-peer overlay connections using the user's choice of software by providing a secure, reliable way to exchange IP:port information. Goal here when using Tor is not anonymity nor censorship evasion, it's reachability. Similarly, goal of peer-to-peer is not necessarily anonymity nor evading censorship either, it's bypassing commercially-motivated, eavesdropping middlemen known as "tech" companies, and avoiding the annoyances of advertising. A possible additional benefot of using Tor in this way is elevated privacy. Google, for example, cannot easily discover Onion Services. No one can discover Onion Services using ICANN DNS.
1. The term "tech" as in "tech company" means a company, usually a website, that collects data from and about people to support the sale of advertising services because advertising services are the only services the company can sell on a scale large enough to sustain a profitable business.
More reading/viewing:
https://github.com/anderspitman/awesome-tunneling
Tor Hidden Services (now called "Onion Services")
https://jamielittle.org/2016/08/28/hidden.html
As one author wrote on Github:
"onion-expose is a utility that allows one to easily create and control temporary Tor onion services.
onion-expose can be used for any sort of TCP traffic, from simple HTTP to Internet radio to Minecraft to SSH servers. It can also be used to expose individual files and allow you to request them from another computer.
Why not just use ngrok?
ngrok is nice. But it requires everything to go through a central authority (a potential security issue), and imposes artificial restrictions, such as a limit of one TCP tunnel per user. It also doesn't allow you to expose files easily (you have to set it up yourself)."
https://github.com/ethan2-0/onion-expose
As another Github contributor put it:
"With onionpipe, that service doesn't need a public IPv4 or IPv6 ingress. You can publish services with a globally-unique persistent onion address, and share access securely and privately to your own allowlist of authorized keys.
You don't need to rely on, and share your personal data with for-profit services (like Tailscale, ZeroTier, etc.) to get to it."
https://github.com/cmars/onionpipe
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=36734956
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=30445421
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=29929399
"Finally, onion services are private by default, meaning that users must discover these sites organically, rather than with a search engine." [Small websites with small audiences get buried by advertising-supported search engines anyway.]
https://nymity.ch/onion-services/pdf/sec18-onion-services.pd...
https://media.ccc.de/v/31c3_-_6112_-_en_-_saal_2_-_201412301...
https://wiki.termux.com/wiki/Bypassing_NAT (Termux recommends Tor over Ngrok)
https://github.com/ajvb/awesome-tor
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Awesome Penetration Testing
See also awesome-tor.
SQLMap
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Best Hacking Tools for Beginners 2024
sqlmap
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Restful API Testing (my way) with Express, Maria DB, Docker Compose and Github Action
A few weeks ago, I took a short cyber security course on Udemy. SQL injection was a section of the course. I knew about the concept though, I hadn't tried it. I was planning to make a Restful API server and tried SQL injection using a tool sqlmap, which was introduced in the course. While I could have used existing server code, I decided to build one from scratch. It's been a while since I worked on a Restful API server, and I wanted to refresh my knowledge for learning purposes.
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Is this sql query in django safe?
I recommend looking for an alternative or if you must do it this way test it with https://sqlmap.org to make sure you are not vulnerable to the lowest effort attacks.
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Enhancing Code Quality and Security: Building a Rock-Solid CI Test Suite for Seamless Development
The DAST checks can be automated up to a certain point, where the code should be able to withstand certain scans and attacks. For eg. SQL Injections can be checked with sqlmap which tests with each and every type of sql injection payload and reports it back to the user.
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👨🏻💻Securing Your Web Applications from SQL Injection with SQLMap
git clone --depth 1 https://github.com/sqlmapproject/sqlmap.git sqlmap-dev
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Are these good projects to have? (appsec)
Sounds good, why not try making a simple vulnerability scanner for APIs too? Maybe something similar to SQLMap
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[GitHub Action]: Wrappers for sqlmap, bbot and nikto
Its not that much of a tool than wrappers of few awesome tools that most of you probably know and use today - sqlmap, bbot and nikto.
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[GitHub Action][Release]: Add DAST and OSINT to your security pipelines
I'm excited to share with you my latest contributions to the GitHub community: a collection of free GitHub Actions designed to streamline and enhance security practices utilizing DAST and OSINT tooling that is widely used - sqlmap, bbot and nikto. There were no GH Actions that I could find, so I made them for my use case, but figured everyone can benefit from those awesome tools.
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The 36 tools that SaaS can use to keep their product and data safe from criminal hackers (manual research)
SQLMap
- sqlmap wiki githib
What are some alternatives?
masscan - TCP port scanner, spews SYN packets asynchronously, scanning entire Internet in under 5 minutes.
nuclei - Fast and customizable vulnerability scanner based on simple YAML based DSL.
Tor-Bridges-Collector - Collecting Tor Bridges.
Metasploit - Metasploit Framework
awesome-privacy - 💡Limiting personal data leaks on the internet
setoolkit - The Social-Engineer Toolkit (SET) repository from TrustedSec - All new versions of SET will be deployed here.
onion-expose - Easily create Tor hidden services with one command.
ZAP - The ZAP core project
bettercap - The Swiss Army knife for 802.11, BLE, IPv4 and IPv6 networks reconnaissance and MITM attacks.
commix - Automated All-in-One OS Command Injection Exploitation Tool.
john - John the Ripper jumbo - advanced offline password cracker, which supports hundreds of hash and cipher types, and runs on many operating systems, CPUs, GPUs, and even some FPGAs
RustScan - 🤖 The Modern Port Scanner 🤖