Social Media News, E-books and Web Technology
Posts tagged Hacking
Google Hacking – Download using “Parent Directory”
Aug 29th
The second episode of my Google Hacking series, this one explains how to find the files you want (videos, mp3′s etc.) using Google and Parent Directories. This can easily be used illegally and I do not in anyway encourage that, I’m pretty sure thats in the disclaimer in the credits.
Hacking with Netcat, Targeted Brute Force Dictionaries, V…
Aug 27th
Darren shows off some nifty tricks for Netcat and a targeted brute force attack dictionary generator. Matt continues his series on Virtualization with redundancy and Shannon pimps the blog with her WordPress plugin picks. Plus the results of our Monkey Contest, the Code Challenge and this weeks easter egg hunt
Collin’s Lab: Guitar pedal hacking with Arduino
Aug 26th
Instead of chaining multiple guitar effects in search of a new sound, I decided to mod just one. Using an Arduino microcontroller board + digi-pot chip, I was able to add a variable gating effect to a fuzz pedal. source code + more infos here: blog.makezine.com video, audio, & riffs by Collin Cunningham
Hacking The Planet
Aug 25th
Links to today’s news: www.ametsoc.org The American Meteorological Society www.newscientist.com Climate engineering research gets green light www.vanityfair.com Rich Harvard, Poor Harvard www.timepolls.com Time.com Poll: Now that Walter Cronkite has passed on, who is America’s most trusted newscaster? www.huffingtonpost.com Online Poll: Jon Stewart Is America’s Most Trusted Newsman www.youtube.com Auto-Tune the News #5: lettuce regulation. American blessings. www.techcrunch.com Face.com Brings Facial Recognition To Facebook Photos totallylookslike.com Totally Looks Like.com curbed.com Architectural Craziness Redux: Meet Manhattan Airport!
IEFD Ep. 13 – Website Hacking – XSS part 1
Aug 23rd
In this episode of Full Disclosure we are explaining the website attack known as Cross-Site Scripting (XSS). Cross-Site Scripting is a type of security vulnerability that affects web applications that do not sanitize user input properly. This kind of vulnerability allows an “attacker” to inject HTML or client side script like JavaScript into the website. Cross-Site Scripting is most commonly used to steal cookies. Cookies are used for authenticating, tracking, and maintaining specific information about users; therefore, by stealing a user’s cookies an attacker could bypass the website’s access control. There are three types of XSS attacks: Persistent, Non-Persistent, and DOM-Based. In this episode we will cover Persistent and Non-Persistent Cross-Site Scripting attacks. Part 1 of 2 www.InfinityExists.com

