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@Undercode_Testing

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@Undercode_News

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πŸ¦‘WHAT IS TAMPER ATTACK ?

1) Tamperproofing, conceptually, is a methodology used to hinder, deter or detect unauthorised access to a device or circumvention of a security system. Since any device or system can be foiled by a person with sufficient knowledge, equipment, and time, the term "tamperproof" is a misnomer unless some limitations on the tampering party's resources is explicit or assumed.


2) An item secured with special screw heads may be considered tamperproof by casual passers-by, but can be removed by someone equipped with particular tools.
Tamper resistance is resistance to tampering (intentional malfunction or sabotage) by either the normal users of a product, package, or system or others with physical access to it.

3) Tamper resistance ranges from simple features like screws with special drives, more complex devices that render themselves inoperable or encrypt all data transmissions between individual chips, or use of materials needing special tools and knowledge. Tamper-resistant devices or features are common on packages to deter package or product tampering.

4) Anti-tamper devices have one or more components: tamper resistance, tamper detection, tamper response, and tamper evidence.

In some applications, devices are only tamper-evident rather than tamper-resistant.

from wiki
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Forwarded from UNDERCODE NEWS
The IT industry suddenly brakes with the new corona, and there is a risk that the slump will be prolonged due to project cancellation.
#international
πŸ¦‘4.5 ratingβ€” Excel Pivot Table Basics :
Start analyzing data with Excel's most powerful data analysis tool, Pivot Tables. They're easier than you think

Use basic Pivot Tables in Excel

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https://www.udemy.com/course/pivot-table-basics/
Forwarded from UNDERCODE NEWS
DXO preview iPhone 12 Pro Max camera evaluation: or compete with Huawei Mate40 Pro.
#Technologies
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πŸ¦‘πŸ”ͺ System tamper detector for USB, Bluetooth, AC, Battery, Disk Tray, and Ethernet:


πŸ„ΈπŸ„½πŸ…‚πŸ…ƒπŸ„°πŸ„»πŸ„»πŸ„ΈπŸ…‚πŸ„°πŸ…ƒπŸ„ΈπŸ„ΎπŸ„½ & πŸ…πŸ…„πŸ„½ :

A) Linux
1) git
clone https://github.com/Lvl4Sword/Killer.git

2) cd ./Killer

3) mkdir -p ~/.virtualenvs/

4) python3 -m venv ~/.virtualenvs/killer

5) source ~/.virtualenvs/killer/bin/activate

6) python -m pip install -U pip

7) python -m pip install -U -r requirements.txt

8) python -m pip install -U -r dev-requirements.txt

B) Windows

1) git clone https://github.com/Lvl4Sword/Killer.git

2) Set-Location -Path .\Killer

3) New-Item -ItemType Directory -Force -Path
$env:USERPROFILE\.virtualenvs\

4) py -3 -m venv $env:USERPROFILE\.virtualenvs\killer
$env:USERPROFILE\.virtualenvs\Scripts\Activate.ps1\

5) python -m pip install -U pip

7) pip install -U -r requirements.txt

8) pip install -U -r dev-requirements.txt

πŸ„»πŸ„΄πŸ…ƒ'πŸ…‚ πŸ…‚πŸ…ƒπŸ„°πŸ…πŸ…ƒ :

python -m killer --help

THEN SET OPTIONS SIMPLY
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Forwarded from UNDERCODE NEWS
Microsoft announced a hacker attack on vaccine creators.
#CyberAttacks
Forwarded from UNDERCODE NEWS
Facebook receives antitrust warning from US Federal Trade Commission.
#international
Forwarded from UNDERCODE NEWS
Once again, Apple M1 displays OpenCL running scores at the previous 1,000 $US stage alone
#international
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πŸ¦‘TOP Reverse Engineering Books

The IDA Pro Book
[Reverse Engineering for Beginners](http://beginners.re/)
Assembly Language for Intel-Based Computers (5th Edition)
[Practical Reverse Engineering](http://amzn.com/B00IA22R2Y)
Reversing: Secrets of Reverse Engineering
[Practical Malware Analysis](http://amzn.com/1593272901)
Malware Analyst's Cookbook
[Gray Hat Hacking](http://amzn.com/0071832386)
The Art of Memory Forensics
[Hacking: The Art of Exploitation](http://amzn.com/1593271441)
Fuzzing for Software Security
[Art of Software Security Assessment](http://amzn.com/0321444426)
The Antivirus Hacker's Handbook
[The Rootkit Arsenal](http://amzn.com/144962636X)
Windows Internals Part 1 Part 2
[Inside Windows Debugging](http://amzn.com/0735662789)
iOS Reverse Engineering
[The Shellcoders Handbook](http://a.co/6H55943)
A Guide to Kernel Exploitation
[Agner's software optimization resources](http://www.agner.org/optimize/)
Learning Malware Analysis
[Binary Analysis](https://nostarch.com/binaryanalysis)
Serious Cryptography

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Forwarded from UNDERCODE NEWS
iPhone 13 can finally carry a larger battery! All because of this technology.
#Technologies
Forwarded from UNDERCODE NEWS
Google and the United States Department of Justice fights over data privacy directives for Microsoft and other third-party legal orders.
#international
Forwarded from UNDERCODE NEWS
India has fallen into political polarization, and Wikipedia-related content is also β€œchaotic”
#international
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πŸ¦‘FOR PRO USERS LINUX BOOT PROCESS DIR :

Step 1. Open the init.d directory
Now that we have a basic understanding of the Linux boot process, let's see if we can add Snort to the overall boot process of our Kali.

First, let's go to the /etc/init.d directory, this is the directory of the initializing daemon (not to be confused with inetd). This directory contains all scripts that start various processes during system boot.

kali> cd /etc/init.d
kali> ls -l


As you can see in the screenshot, these files can be executed by the init process at system boot. Take a look at the apache2 process for example. If we go down a little further down the page, we see rc.local.

Step 2. Open rc.local with a text editor


Now let's open rc.local in any text editor, rc.local contains a script to start the necessary processes in the background at system boot. We'll be using Leafpad here.

kali> leafpad /etc/init.d/rc.local


Step 3. Install Snort
Now let's see if we can use what we've learned about autoloading to get Snort IDS to start at system boot. If you don't have Snort installed yet, do it right now by entering the following command in the console:

kali> apt-get install snort
The Snort package will download and install. During its installation, Snort will place its startup script in the /etc/init.d directory. Let's look there and make sure of this.

kali> ls -l


As you can see, Snort has indeed placed its startup script in the /etc/init.d directory. Now all we have to do is execute this script every time the system starts up.

If you compiled Snort from source, you may not have this script. In this case, just create a file called "snort" and save it in the /etc/init.d directory. In this file, place a command to start Snort, for example:

/ usr / sbin / snort -D -c /etc/snort/snort.conf -l / var / log / snor
Make sure that this script has permission to execute it (755).

Step 4. Starting Snort from rc.local
There are many ways to run a script at system startup, but the easiest way is to use the rc.local file. As we saw earlier, the rc.local file contains a script to start various services at boot time. Now all we have to do is add commands to start Snort in this file.

Let's open this file with Leafpad and add two lines at the end of the file to: 1) make sure that the correct interface is selected in promiscuous mode of the NIC (ifconfig eth0 up -arp), and 2) execute the script that Snort put in init.d directory (/etc/init.d/snort start).



Now when your system powers up, Snort will always run in the background. Let's see this. Reboot your Kali system and see if Snort starts automatically.

Now that our system has rebooted, let's check if Snort is running. To do this, type in the console:

kali> ps aux | grep snort


Excellent! Now our network is constantly protected by the Snort package from the moment our system boots!

Be sure to come back as we will continue to explore the inner workings of Linux to give you the skills that professional hackers need!

@UndercodeTesting
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