pocorgtfo
exiftool
pocorgtfo | exiftool | |
---|---|---|
7 | 249 | |
1,223 | 2,860 | |
- | 2.8% | |
5.8 | 7.0 | |
3 months ago | 9 days ago | |
TeX | Perl | |
- | 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.
pocorgtfo
-
MIPS Firmware Reverse Engineering - anyone having any success using Ghidra for this?
Your best bet here is to get the base address nailed down (assuming it’s a flat/monolithic image). There are a handful of utilities floating around (binbloom, basefind2) that use various pointer heuristics to try to guess the base address. There’s also a nice trick detailed in PoC||GTFO that you can use pretty reliably.
- Image displays its own MD5 hash
- Gitlab servers are being exploited in DDoS attacks in excess of 1 Tbps
-
smh dumb antivirus software
execute the pdf: https://github.com/angea/pocorgtfo
-
SHA-1 'Fully and Practically Broken' by New Collision
1) People systematically underestimate how easy it is to create collisions that still do something "interesting", like being polyglots. See PoC||GTFO, specifically anything by Ange Albertini, for examples; grep https://github.com/angea/pocorgtfo/blob/master/README.md for "MD5".
1bis) You can use an existing collision to create new collisions. People seem to think you need to generate all the work again from scratch.
1cis) The files do not need to be gigantic.
2) You can do the collision in advance, and publish the malicious version later. What it accomplishes is that the concept of "this Git hash unambiguously specifies a revision" no longer works, and one of them can be malicious.
3) The standard should be "obviously safe beyond a reasonable doubt", not "not obviously unsafe to a non-expert". By the latter standard, pretty much any random encryption construction is fine.
-
Show HN: Redbean: single-file distributable web server
If you want to learn more how these things work I'd highly suggest going through the PoC||GTFO archive (https://github.com/angea/pocorgtfo/blob/master/README.md) and check out entries by Ange Albertini or entries named like "This ZIP is also a PDF".
exiftool
-
Ask HN: Best to store, index and categorize audio recordings
If you're doing a pipelined bulk processing pass to add metadata tags after extracting them via Speech to text, or have delimited notes in a text file, or ... etc.
You might find ExifTool useful.
It's pure commandline (with a few third party GUI's IIRC) multiplatform and purpose built to display, edit, add media tags to all sorts of AV files.
https://exiftool.org/
-
Cleaning up my 200GB iCloud with some JavaScript
> Any method that I've found to clean them up (exporting the originals, deleting them from the library, and then re-importing the JPEGs only seems easiest) will lose all of the years of metadata that I've built up in the library.
The open source tool osxphotos (https://github.com/RhetTbull/osxphotos) can help with this. You can export the JPEG images while preserving metadata using the thrid-party exiftool utility:
`osxphotos export /path/to/export --has-raw --skip-raw --exiftool`
This exports all images that have a raw pair but skips the raw component then uses exiftool (https://exiftool.org/) to write the metadata (keywords, etc.) to the exported JPEG files. You can then re-import these into photos either by dragging them or by running `osxphotos import /path/to/export/*`
Both the export and import commands have many other options for controlling export directory, etc. `osxphotos help export` or `osxphotos docs` to open docs in browser. (Disclaimer: I'm the author of osxphotos)
-
Is there a way to remove metadata from an image file?
Check out exiftool.org
- EXIF Data from Cloud Stock Photo Used for Production of Satellite Video
-
Locationator: Access Apple's Reverse Geocoding service from the command line, Services menu
Locationator also comes with an optional CLI that can be used to perform reverse geocoding on images from the command line or perform the reverse geocoding and then write the location data to the file's XMP metadata using exiftool. It also comes with two services for doing the same from the Finder or other apps using the Services menu.
-
Modifying "Media Creation Date" metadata in .m4v files?
Edit: Nevermind, I got it. I used PyExifTool and installed exiftool from exiftool.org.
- Exploring EXIF
-
Canon PowerShot S95
May not work as not all camera store the serial number in the EXIF, but if you've got exiftool installed you can try running:
-
JPEG XL: How It Started, How It’s Going
I think TIFF has some unique features that makes it more prone to certain security issues[1] compared to other formats, such as storing absolute file offsets instead of relative offsets. So I am not sure TIFF is a good container format, but many camera raws are TIFF-based for some reason.[2]
[1] https://cve.mitre.org/cgi-bin/cvekey.cgi?keyword=libtiff
[2] https://exiftool.org/#supported (search for "TIFF-based")
-
How to keep file creation dates intact when importing to DSM?
I have struggled with this in the past, and I found the utility called exiftool quite useful.
What are some alternatives?
gitlab-workhorse
exiv2 - Image metadata library and tools
polyshell - A Bash/Batch/PowerShell polyglot!
jExifToolGUI - jExifToolGUI is a multi-platform java/Swing graphical frontend for the excellent command-line ExifTool application by Phil Harvey
RedBean - ORM layer that creates models, config and database on the fly
exifcleaner - Cross-platform desktop GUI app to clean image metadata
Judge0 API - 🔥 The most advanced open-source online code execution system in the world.
HomeBrew - 🍺 The missing package manager for macOS (or Linux)
sha1collisiondetection - Library and command line tool to detect SHA-1 collision in a file
FFmpeg - Mirror of https://git.ffmpeg.org/ffmpeg.git
Metasploit - Metasploit Framework
DiffusionToolkit - Metadata-indexer and Viewer for AI-generated images