vpz

joined 1 year ago
[–] vpz@infosec.pub 5 points 4 months ago (4 children)

I’ve been using my keyboard, Toast, for two years. I use it with a modified Miryoku layout with Colemak DH. It’s for work, travel and at home.

I open-sourced Toast too

https://github.com/vpzed/keyboards/tree/main/toast

I also built half an MX-switch Helix to have a fully programmable gaming keypad for home.

[–] vpz@infosec.pub 1 points 7 months ago (1 children)

I’ve used Tenable Nessus Professional, and Tenable Security Center and both work well in their categories. Nessus Professional is a portable Nessus scanner a security person can take with them to do adhoc scans. Security Center (aka Tenable.sc) is a vulnerability management solution for an enterprise.

Their competition is Rapid7 and Qualys, but I can’t speak to those myself.

[–] vpz@infosec.pub 1 points 9 months ago

Pentesting skills are built upon skills in Linux and Windows system administration from the command line, networking, some coding usually in Python, knowledge of web applications and web servers, and more. When starting out it can feel bad because you want to learn out pentesting topic X, but then you figure out that you need to go learn at least the basics of fundamental topic A and B first. It’s normal so don’t worry about. Just dig in and enjoy the knowledge journey.

[–] vpz@infosec.pub 1 points 9 months ago

My personal opinion is that technical cybersecurity roles are not great straight-out-of-school jobs. Technical cyber roles can expect a candidate to already have experience with networking, system administration, some coding, technical writing, and presentation skills.

So starting with other IT roles like help desk, system administration and networking, etc. can help build knowledge.

[–] vpz@infosec.pub 3 points 11 months ago (1 children)

Not a question but I’d like to provide some career guidance. If you’re interested in a career in penetration testing, please, please put some time in your training plan for technical writing. So many folks think the job is all hacking, but it’s really about a third project planning with meetings and such, a third hacking and a third writing. Writing rules of engagement, test plans, reports, presentations on results, etc. So business and writing is just as important as the technical stuff. A well rounded applicant will have better luck finding a role.

Thanks for listening to my Ted talk.

[–] vpz@infosec.pub 2 points 11 months ago (1 children)

I’m looking into Azure penetration testing training. Specifically Azure. I found NetSPI has an offering called Dark Side Ops: Azure Cloud Pentesting. Anyone have experience with this course or NetSPI training in general?

[–] vpz@infosec.pub 2 points 11 months ago

IMO penetration testing is a skill that is built upon knowledge of the fundamentals in a pretty long list of topics. System admin using the command line only for Linux and Windows, network administration like switches, routers and firewalls, web applications, databases, and programming. Again, the fundamentals. No need to be an expert. Knowing command line is key because usually you won’t have GUI access to targets.

So what I tell folks is to look at where they have gaps and do some introduction courses on those topics.

For example if databases are a weak area learn the basics on some SQL and no-SQL databases. That will help lay a foundation for later learning database attacks like SQL Injection.

Same applies to many penetration testing concepts. One needs to understand the underlying fundamentals that support the attack to really get it.

Then it’s a matter of building skill in identifying weaknesses and matching those up with a technique that can exploit the weakness. That is a continuous learning process because tech never sits still. It’s perfect for the perpetual student type.

[–] vpz@infosec.pub 3 points 1 year ago (1 children)

I recently achieved a multi-year goal of obtaining the OffSec Certified Expert3 certification after achieving the OSCP, OSEP, OSWE, and OSED penetration testing certifications. It was a serious grind but I learned a lot, the skills are applicable to my work, and hopefully all this alphabet soup helps if I end up looking for a new position in the future. Right now I’m glad the grind is over and I can start building depth of knowledge in some of these areas.

[–] vpz@infosec.pub 16 points 1 year ago (4 children)

I’ve run Linux for years on servers and in VMs in VMware Workstation, but not my main OS because of games. I’ve tried before but games just didn’t work well. Tried again recently and the games I’m playing now worked with no issues with Lutris and Steam. I could already do “everything else” on Linux so this is the longest I’ve gone without booting back to my Windows disk. Already have a Kali VM in virt-manager and will add a Windows VM if I hit an application snag. But so far haven’t had any app issues. If this continues I’ll be wiping the Windows disk to make more space for Linux.

[–] vpz@infosec.pub 9 points 1 year ago (6 children)

What Vivaldi features do you feel are game changing? I’m not that familiar with it and would love to hear from someone who uses Vivaldi.

[–] vpz@infosec.pub 7 points 1 year ago

There is no one way to secure Linux servers because Linux isn’t one thing due to distribution sprawl. How you do things depends on the distribution. If you want a general guide the CIS Benchmarks are a decent place to start. Then you can make a guide on how to implement them with your target Linux server distribution. Keep in mind this is for the OS and application hardening is just as important, and is an entirely different can of worms. https://downloads.cisecurity.org/#/

[–] vpz@infosec.pub 3 points 1 year ago (2 children)

Something I don’t think is talked about enough in offensive cybersecurity training / skill development are communication skills. Too often we are seeing folks try to enter these roles without the ability to write reports and give presentations to audiences with a mix of technical and business attendees. My recommendation to folks considering these roles is to put in the time to get communication skills to a very professional level. Train it just like report writing or public speaking was a new shiny hacking certification. It will improve your chances of landing the job.

view more: next ›