qualcomm_android_monitor_mode
z3
qualcomm_android_monitor_mode | z3 | |
---|---|---|
18 | 28 | |
264 | 9,754 | |
- | 1.1% | |
1.9 | 9.8 | |
about 1 month ago | 3 days ago | |
C++ | ||
- | 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.
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qualcomm_android_monitor_mode
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Hacking WiFi 101: basic concepts, terminology, and a real-life example
Aircrack-ng
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Is there a way to brute force wifi passwords from a known list
Use aircrack-ng to capture the WiFi 4-way handshake. Specifically;
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Hack WIFI with WPS
https://www.aircrack-ng.org/ try this
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Notes from competing in my first CTF
I mainly used Wireshark and aircrack-ng
- Aircrack-ng
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Had a question in my mind stuck since childhood and that's can we really hack wifi password with linux ?
Under the right circumstances. https://www.aircrack-ng.org/
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Hashcat problem
Have you looked at aircrack-ng?
- What are your best ideas for making your neighbor's life hell?
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Linux on the laptop works so damn well that it’s boring
I've had mixed results on laptops. I've never bothered to make the fingerprint reader work, that just isn't my thing. I've had decent luck with all the standard functions video, audio, storage, keyboard, mousepad, wifi on most models of Lenovo and Dell in the last decade. I've had mixed results on Asus laptops, especially the recent ones. The biggest challenge I've had is finding out ahead of time what wifi chipset is used and this has only affected me when using tools like aircrack-ng [1]. The way I quickly test how a laptop will behave is to boot Kali Linux [2] into ram. Sometimes a sales person at a computer store would let me do this on a demo model.
[1] - https://www.aircrack-ng.org/
[2] - https://www.kali.org/
- Tails/TOR at home
z3
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Ask HN: What is the current state of "logical" AI?
See https://cacm.acm.org/magazines/2023/6/273222-the-silent-revo... and also modern production rules engines like https://drools.org/
Oddly, back when “expert system shells” were cool people thought 10,000 rules were difficult to handle, now 1,000,000 might not be a problem at all. Back then the RETE algorithm was still under development and people were using linear search and not hash tables to do their lookups.
Also https://github.com/Z3Prover/z3
Note “the semantic web” is both an advance and a retreat in that OWL is a subset of first order logic which is really decidable and sorta kinda fast. It can do a lot but people aren’t really happy with what it can do.
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Lean4 helped Terence Tao discover a small bug in his recent paper
Code correctness is a lost art. I requirement to think in abstractions is what scares a lot of devs to avoid it. The higher abstraction language (formal specs) focus on a dedicated language to describe code, whereas lower abstractions (code contracts) basically replace validation logic with a better model.
C# once had Code Contracts[1]; a simple yet powerful way to make formal specifications. The contracts was checked at compile time using the Z3 SMT solver[2]. It was unfortunately deprecated after a few years[3] and once removed from the .NET Runtime it was declared dead.
The closest thing C# now have is probably Dafny[4] while the C# dev guys still try to figure out how to implement it directly in the language[5].
[1] https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/research/project/code-contra...
[2] https://github.com/Z3Prover/z3
[3] https://github.com/microsoft/CodeContracts
[4] https://github.com/dafny-lang/dafny
[5] https://github.com/dotnet/csharplang/issues/105
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Programming Languages Going Above and Beyond
I believe, Nim also has this functionality, although, it uses the [0]Z3Prover tool with a nim frontend [1]"DrNim" for proving.
[0]https://github.com/Z3Prover/z3
- Modern SAT solvers: fast, neat and underused (2018)
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If You've Got Enough Money, It's All 'Lawful'
Don't get me wrong, there are times when Microsoft got it right the first time that was technically far superior to their competitors. Windows IOCP was theoretically capable of doing C10K as far back in 1994-95 when there wasn't any hardware support yet and UNIX world was bickering over how to do asynchronous I/O. Years later POSIX came up with select which was a shoddy little shit in comparison. Linux caved in finally only as recently as 2019 and implemented io_uring. Microsoft research has contributed some very interesting things to computer science like Z3 SAT solver and in collaboration with INRIA made languages like F* and Low* for formal specification and verification. But all this dwarfs in comparison to all the harm they did.
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Constraint Programming 'linking' variables
Z3 theorem prover SMT solver might help you.
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General mathematical expression analysis system
Other than that, you should look at Z3 which is pretty damn good at these sort of theorems/constraints.
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-🎄- 2022 Day 21 Solutions -🎄-
In the end I used Z3 Julia bindings instead. The hardest part was to get the result back from it, because I kept running into assertion violations from inside Z3
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Question about Predicate Transformer Semantics
I'm trying to learn a little bit about Predicate Transformer Semantics (PTS) as part of a quick exploration of Z3.
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The Little Prover
> And you propose me instead to go and reverse engineer library Js code which I am not that proficient in, and rewrite all code in Java instead?..
Yes, rather than demand others cater to your whims, frankly.
Do you realise how hypocritical it sounds to complain that you are not proficient in Javascript, when others might not be proficient in ?
Go use Z3 if you need a prover in C++ (or Java), its far more robust (provided its the type you're after) than someones 700 LoC JavaScript implementation.
https://github.com/Z3Prover/z3
What are some alternatives?
openwrt-useful-tools - A repo containing different tools compiled specifically for the Hak5 WiFi Pineapple MK6 and MK7.
employee-scheduling-ui - An UI component for Employee Scheduling application.
bettercap - The Swiss Army knife for 802.11, BLE, IPv4 and IPv6 networks reconnaissance and MITM attacks.
advent-of-code - My solutions to http://adventofcode.com/ :)
usbrip - Tracking history of USB events on GNU/Linux
advent-of-code-go - All 8 years of adventofcode.com solutions in Go/Golang; 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022
gef - GEF (GDB Enhanced Features) - a modern experience for GDB with advanced debugging capabilities for exploit devs & reverse engineers on Linux
magmide - A dependently-typed proof language intended to make provably correct bare metal code possible for working software engineers.
dnscat2
ikos - Static analyzer for C/C++ based on the theory of Abstract Interpretation.
Metasploit - Metasploit Framework
androguard - Reverse engineering and pentesting for Android applications