cyberowl
cve-bin-tool
Our great sponsors
cyberowl | cve-bin-tool | |
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14 | 10 | |
241 | 1,071 | |
- | 3.8% | |
6.3 | 9.8 | |
3 months ago | 5 days ago | |
Python | Python | |
MIT License | GNU General Public License v3.0 only |
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.
cyberowl
- Promote your business, week of May 15, 2023
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I launched my first SaaS on ProductHunt and I don't know if I should have
Cyberowl: https://cyberowl.org
- A tool that aggregates security advisories from multiple sources. You can get them by email!
- I built a tool that aggregates security advisories from multiple sources. You can get them by email!
- A website to get latest security advisories from multiple sources
- GitHub - karimhabush/cyberowl: A daily updated summary of the most frequent types of security incidents currently being reported from different sources.
- Daily updated summary of security incidents reported from different sources
- A daily updated summary of the most frequent types of security incidents being reported by CISA, CERT-FR, MA-CERT, ZeroDayInitiative and IBMCloud.
cve-bin-tool
- FLaNK Stack Weekly 19 Feb 2024
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2022 Highlights: Open Source Development! ✨
intel/cve-bin-tool - 2 pull requests
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December goals
Intel/cve-bin-tool: There are several issues in this repository that are interesting to me, particularly the ones about creating checkers. I would say it is not very coding-heavy, but it needs a lot of research before doing it.
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The perfect open-sourcer does not exist
Whether you contribute small or big chunks of code, being consistent about them carries vital importance. Small contributions to a particular project help you to get familiar with it at first and leads to something bigger. Take a look at some pull requests I have raised to the following projects; withfig, cve-bin-tool, my-photohub, pr-approve-generator.
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Release 0.3 External Pull Request
For my release 0.3 for OSD600, I have to create a pull request for an external repo. The repo I contributed to was cve-bin-tool. This post was late because I had was busy with other commitments and projects compounded with problems finding workable issues. In the future, I would definitely follow my own advice and search for issues early and often. I didn't follow this advice and found myself in this position.
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May the merge be with you - Hacktoberfest 🎃
The issue was to fix mypy type issues in __init__.py. I was able to fix the type issues and also added type annotations to the codebase. The project was well documented and I faced no issues running it. Big projects like nodejs, vscode or this, cve-bin-tool all have strict guidelines for contributions. Even on the commit messages get checked when you raise a PR. See one of the commit messages from gitlint in their workflow.
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On persistence, collaboration, trial and error - Hacktoberfest 2022 🚀🌟🔧
My two PRs for Intel’s CVE-Binary-Tool got merged! These (Fix1 , Fix 2) were my first ever Hacktoberfest merges. These were small contributions but big confidence boosters. I am a beginner in programming, and if I can make small contributions, so can you. From one beginner to another – start small, try your best, trust the process, and ask for help.
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Hacktoberfest PR#2: Windows isn't the greatest OS for development
So, eventually I started looking for issues rather than repos. I added some labels and details to the search so I wouldn't just look through 83 million issues, and finally found an issue in Intel's cve-bin-tool.
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Things I Learned Through My First Hacktoberfest Pull Requests!
I created two pull requests for Intel’s CVE Binary Tool. CVE Binary Tool is a tool that scans a file for known Common Vulnerabilities and Exposures.
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My first contribution to Intel!
My goal for this year's Hacktoberfest was to contribute to at least one big established company or product in IT. Luckily for me, I landed on a an interesting repo called the CVE Binary Tool. It is an open source tool to help you determine if your system includes known vulnerabilities. It is based of the data from the National Vulnerability Database (NVD) list of Common Vulnerabilities and Exposures (CVEs).
What are some alternatives?
vulnerablecode - A free and open vulnerabilities database and the packages they impact. And the tools to aggregate and correlate these vulnerabilities. Sponsored by NLnet https://nlnet.nl/project/vulnerabilitydatabase/ for https://www.aboutcode.org/ Chat at https://gitter.im/aboutcode-org/vulnerablecode Docs at https://vulnerablecode.readthedocs.org/
rahat-agency - Agency management system for Rahat
vulnix - Vulnerability (CVE) scanner for Nix/NixOS.
my-photohub - Making it easy to share your photos using GitHub Pages
community-images - :gem: RapidFort hardened secure images
palpatine - ⚡Darth sidious does static site generator with unlimited power!
faraday - Open Source Vulnerability Management Platform
glific-frontend - Frontend for the Glific platform
webdevamin - My freelance web agency website
CVElk - Autoconfigured ELK Stack That Contains All EPSS and NVD CVE Data
pre-commit - A framework for managing and maintaining multi-language pre-commit hooks.