Mira
736 subscribers
801 photos
25 videos
20 files
263 links
sporadic attempts at cybersec.
personal channel.

files: @mira_files
playlist: @the_coding_playlist
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> creates a private music channel so that no one knows the cringe songs i listen to
> *looks back*
> 10 views
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Mira
cringe songs
want access ?
Miki said they are smh good. not top tier taste like @Su_ch_is_life or any of the peeps who are into Art, but they pass the vibe check for a casual listen while doing some chores. here goes:

https://t.me/+CmBzrluJ4fExMDRk
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Mira
Kinda pausing all my cybersec activities for 7 weeks.
okay
it kinda feels empty without cybersec and coding. the break was meant to take care of my personal stuff, but I am managing to get some time off. so, I am gonna dive into cloud computing to pass the boredom. I am messing around to get a linux server from oracle cloud currently. will keep you updated
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If she handles your autistic ass and adhd, she a ten
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in a tribute to brookmg, one of the android chad

https://github.com/brookmg?tab=overview&from=2016-10-01
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Mira
hmm... gonna check this https://www.mygreatlearning.com/cloud-computing/free-courses?p=2 #resources
if your intention is to be a cloud engineer or some sorta cloud specialization, the major providers have free academy dedicated to their vendor (like AWS educate) and that often comes with good free cloud resource tier.

but I am learning cloud computing to automate some stuff which can be useful later on. first had the idea from one of the Stok's interview on bug bounty. he basically conducts parallel network scans using Nmap on the cloud, by spinning up multiple VMs or droplets on a service like DigitalOcean with its own unique IP address so that he can run five parallel Nmap scans by giving five different IPs to each of his droplets. for example, if Stok was targeting a website hosted on the West Coast of the United States, he could deploy a droplet in a nearby data center and use the other droplets for different targets. this is distributed traffic and helps in reducing latency and avoiding detection by firewalls and IPS. so this is basically scanning at scale with minimized noise on a target. practically, this has challenges especially given that our instability in internet speed (writing this while my connection is being throttled lmao). plus, misconfiguration and multi-tenant issue might pose a risk for critical scans. generally speaking tho, cloud skills are a must
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Forwarded from Dagmawi Babi
Don't forget to send me your questions for Jack Rhysider, you can get as technical and as personal as you'd like.
holiday spam here we come cuz days off
when seeing all this new devs doing challenges and creating projects day in and day out, it makes me wish for the obsession I once had for programming. I really didn't feel tired and I would take on any projects I might find interesting. Before AI and all the vibe coding jazz, I had to lookup for a solution on different blogs, books, videos and any resource accessible. If a solution seemed too naive, I would erase everything and implement the feature in a simple yet maintainable way. There was this project I had to keep track of object visibility and fire up an event every time the object is being focused or loses its focus. I wasn't happy with the solution at the time, and I ended up implementing everything in Section Observer API from scratch. It was basically my mini library for scroll events at the time. Apart from my toy programming language hahu, I tried recreating a 2d game engine, tried implementing a load balancer, and literally I was upto everything. If you ask me now, this is bad. You need to have a clear goal and tackle one thing at a time.

tl;dr

New devs progressing everyday, you're doing good and keep it up. You guys inspire a lot. I might even get back to programming lol
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i was also doing the 100days coding challenge thing back then when starting out. I also had a Javascript logo as a pfp lmao. How time flies
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where it all began even though three cryptographers from the British signals intelligence agency have tried to show how public-key cryptography could be achieved in 1969. Diffie was a former chief security officer of Sun Microsystems (now Oracle), and Hellman was a professor of electrical engineering at Stanford University. Both won the Turing award in 2015 for their contribution in public-key cryptography and digital signatures

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diffie%E2%80%93Hellman_key_exchange?wprov=sfla1
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TIL Mr Bean has a BSc in electronic and electrical engineering and MSc in electrical engineering. he was a PhD student at Oxford until he dropped out to pursue his acting career

https://www.thecourieronline.co.uk/student-success-stories-mr-bean/
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vx-underground
They also called us an embarrassment
they called them a group of pandas.
nothing harmful