Got a bunch of flowers today. The last time I received flowers was for a birthday four years ago.
(D.M.A.): Cooper says, "Kyrra is either the most innocent person in the world, or the girl who uses the most innuendo seemingly unintentionally but really on purpose."
Once I got them home I realised I didn’t have a vase tall enough so I had to trim them down to fit.
(D.M.A.): Cooper says, "Kyrra is either the most innocent person in the world, or the girl who uses the most innuendo seemingly unintentionally but really on purpose."
As there's some speculation on where these are from, I'll share. There's a pair of two incredibly brilliant students that are sisters, and I've been very fond of them since I started working at the school. The flowers were a thank you from them for being very welcoming and supportive, especially in the lead up to exams.
(D.M.A.): Cooper says, "Kyrra is either the most innocent person in the world, or the girl who uses the most innuendo seemingly unintentionally but really on purpose."
Four episodes off being finished with The Punisher. I'm loving it so much.
(D.M.A.): Cooper says, "Kyrra is either the most innocent person in the world, or the girl who uses the most innuendo seemingly unintentionally but really on purpose."
I would but there's no ivorybowstring pieces in stockings or talisman pieces so F that.
Pretty psyched about it actually. Won't happen again likely but.. really good week. Plus my IRA went up a couple thousand over night. And I got word they are finally posting the Probation and Parole contract which I'm all set for, just need to apply. Awesome. Now I wait for the other shoe to fall.....
Plus, in a year I'll likely be setting up my own computer forensics gig, supplemented with repairs and maybe some apps. Sa-weet.
Work dinner tonight was so great even though I was dateless.
(D.M.A.): Cooper says, "Kyrra is either the most innocent person in the world, or the girl who uses the most innuendo seemingly unintentionally but really on purpose."
Today I gave a talk at my Daughters school (An all girls school) to their A Level Computer Science students, and a mix of others, about my career in the IT Industry. We chatting about Career progression, my job, the Dark Web, IoT, coding and finished it off with a hacking demonstration. The engagement was excellent and a couple of students in particular have a really bright future if they continue on this path. It was great to get in front of people who don't see themselves as "security experts" and pitch like I'm selling something, but to give an honest talk about where I see the industry going and what their career aspirations were. I could hear them outside the room afterwards telling all their friends about the hacking and seemed really excited, so was really pleasing to have such an impact.
For reference the hack...
Use my Wifi Pineapple to collect SSID Probes Broadcast those SSID probes and allow associations Devices in the room start connecting to my Wifi, starting a MitM attack. Clone the school website on a Linux box in my VM Load Website with Powershell based malware, which will create a Meterpreter shell back to my Kali box DNS Spoof on my Wifi box to re-direct all traffic to the school website to my cloned site, auto initiating the malware download Malware runs and a session is created to my Kali box, website re-directs automatically to the official site Hand laptop to a student Run keylogger, start the microphone recording and broadcast their webcam streaming to the whole class on the big screen.
The webcam element was a great visual impact tool and seemed to make quite the impression, although clearly you need to find the line between looking to scare and and looking to educate.
Reminded me why I got into IT Security in the first place!
The webcam element was a great visual impact tool and seemed to make quite the impression, although clearly you need to find the line between looking to scare and and looking to educate.
Reminded me why I got into IT Security in the first place!
I got to do something similar on the forensic side. Showed the kids how I can track everything they've done on their network (all the log files for events, router logs, server logs, etc), online (searches [whether typed manually or redirected, etc], stored files, cloud services,etc) and then accessing unallocated space and the registry to show them nothing is really ever gone, even if they think putting it on a thumb drive and deleting it works. Nothing quite so fancy as yours but I think this kind of education is vitally important (yours and mine) to teach kids how they are easily monitored, tracked, and hacked online and not - as well as just how much information their digital devices keep about them. Especially cell phones (deleted messages, skype conversations, where they have been with the phone even with the GPS off, what networks they've connected to, the works).
I really don't think you can scare them enough!
edit: Speaking of which, on top of my great week thus far, I found out my contract is being extended almost indefinitely. I'll be getting another one with a different department, AND a raise. What an amazing week thus far. I only hope the 'downside' of this upswing is the fact I got kinda jack-shit on my 5 grand stockings.
I'd be really keen to delve deeper into the forensics side of things and have looked at the EC Council Forensics course, although moreso because if I passed the exam I'd automatically renew my CEH.
I'd be really keen to delve deeper into the forensics side of things and have looked at the EC Council Forensics course, although moreso because if I passed the exam I'd automatically renew my CEH.
Has a few decent articles. It's not very in-depth (kind of like a Newsweek for forensics) but it gives a good idea. The group at MIT? that figured out how to guess your phone passcode using just the gyroscopes (sensors public to any app) and the event for when you try to log in.. brilliant!
Comments
Once I got them home I realised I didn’t have a vase tall enough so I had to trim them down to fit.
As there's some speculation on where these are from, I'll share. There's a pair of two incredibly brilliant students that are sisters, and I've been very fond of them since I started working at the school. The flowers were a thank you from them for being very welcoming and supportive, especially in the lead up to exams.
Penwize has cowardly forfeited the challenge to mortal combat issued by Atalkez.
If there was anything in my post that gave anything away, I'd agree with you. But there isn't. Calm down.
Penwize has cowardly forfeited the challenge to mortal combat issued by Atalkez.
Pretty psyched about it actually. Won't happen again likely but.. really good week. Plus my IRA went up a couple thousand over night. And I got word they are finally posting the Probation and Parole contract which I'm all set for, just need to apply. Awesome. Now I wait for the other shoe to fall.....
Plus, in a year I'll likely be setting up my own computer forensics gig, supplemented with repairs and maybe some apps. Sa-weet.
For reference the hack...
Use my Wifi Pineapple to collect SSID Probes
Broadcast those SSID probes and allow associations
Devices in the room start connecting to my Wifi, starting a MitM attack.
Clone the school website on a Linux box in my VM
Load Website with Powershell based malware, which will create a Meterpreter shell back to my Kali box
DNS Spoof on my Wifi box to re-direct all traffic to the school website to my cloned site, auto initiating the malware download
Malware runs and a session is created to my Kali box, website re-directs automatically to the official site
Hand laptop to a student
Run keylogger, start the microphone recording and broadcast their webcam streaming to the whole class on the big screen.
The webcam element was a great visual impact tool and seemed to make quite the impression, although clearly you need to find the line between looking to scare and and looking to educate.
Reminded me why I got into IT Security in the first place!
I got to do something similar on the forensic side. Showed the kids how I can track everything they've done on their network (all the log files for events, router logs, server logs, etc), online (searches [whether typed manually or redirected, etc], stored files, cloud services,etc) and then accessing unallocated space and the registry to show them nothing is really ever gone, even if they think putting it on a thumb drive and deleting it works. Nothing quite so fancy as yours but I think this kind of education is vitally important (yours and mine) to teach kids how they are easily monitored, tracked, and hacked online and not - as well as just how much information their digital devices keep about them. Especially cell phones (deleted messages, skype conversations, where they have been with the phone even with the GPS off, what networks they've connected to, the works).
I really don't think you can scare them enough!
edit: Speaking of which, on top of my great week thus far, I found out my contract is being extended almost indefinitely. I'll be getting another one with a different department, AND a raise. What an amazing week thus far. I only hope the 'downside' of this upswing is the fact I got kinda jack-shit on my 5 grand stockings.
Has a few decent articles. It's not very in-depth (kind of like a Newsweek for forensics) but it gives a good idea. The group at MIT? that figured out how to guess your phone passcode using just the gyroscopes (sensors public to any app) and the event for when you try to log in.. brilliant!