hacker101
awesome-incident-response
hacker101 | awesome-incident-response | |
---|---|---|
11 | 4 | |
13,606 | 7,145 | |
0.4% | - | |
7.6 | 6.1 | |
6 days ago | about 1 month ago | |
SCSS | ||
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | Apache License 2.0 |
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.
hacker101
- How to start hacking ?
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I have good knowledge about networks and all other basic things , wanted to get into bug bounty so thought maybe start with Udemy and learn the basics (can only afford Udemy courses at the moment but in future will go for expensive certifications) found these two course should I buy both or any 1.
Secondly, https://www.hacker101.com is also a good resource. If you link your hacker1 account to hacker101 they will give you invites to private programs the further you progress in the learning modules. At least, they used to do that a couple years go.
- "hacking"
- is my password uncrackable? is 22 characters with upper and lowercase letters, symbols and numbers
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Where can I learn to hack?
Also check hacker101
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How to gain bug bounty skills ?
Try hacker101 too, you will need broad resources initially then as you get better you will find depth https://www.hacker101.com/
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New to cyber security. What can I do to improve my experience and knowledge
HackTheBox Academy, TryHackMe, and Hacker101 are all good places to start. I haven't used TryHackMe or Hacker101 personally, but I've heard good things about both.
- Books for pentesting and bug Bounty
- Giving away 2 Tryhackme 1 Month Vouchers
- TryHackMe a good starting point?
awesome-incident-response
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Cybersecurity Repositories
Incident Response
- Questions about getting into DF
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I started a new role as a Incident Response Analyst and wanted to get some advice.
Here is a good github page that discusses tons of IR stuff. https://github.com/meirwah/awesome-incident-response
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Has this sub done any curated reasearch collection sharing?
GitHub sounds totally viable. You might consider styling it after something like Awesome Lists. (Ex: Awesome Incident Response). But yes, totally viable.
What are some alternatives?
awesome-honeypots - an awesome list of honeypot resources
Kuiper - Digital Forensics Investigation Platform
awesome-ctf - A curated list of CTF frameworks, libraries, resources and softwares
cyberchef-recipes - A list of cyber-chef recipes and curated links
oh-my-git - An interactive Git learning game!
dfir-orc - Forensics artefact collection tool for systems running Microsoft Windows
WebGoat - WebGoat is a deliberately insecure application
DevSecOps - Ultimate DevSecOps library
Infosec_Reference - An Information Security Reference That Doesn't Suck; https://rmusser.net/git/admin-2/Infosec_Reference for non-MS Git hosted version.
DFIRMindMaps - A repository of DFIR-related Mind Maps geared towards the visual learners!
awesome-hacking - A curated list of awesome Hacking tutorials, tools and resources
awesome-sre - A curated list of Site Reliability and Production Engineering resources.