Security Leftovers
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Medevel ☛ 18 Open-source DDoS Distributed Denial Of Service Tools for Pentesting Hackers, Penetration Tester and CyberSecurity
A DDoS (Distributed Denial of Service) attack is a malicious attempt to disrupt the regular functioning of a network, service, or website by overwhelming it with a flood of internet traffic. This flood of traffic is generated by multiple compromised devices, forming a botnet.
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Pen Test Partners ☛ Ski & bike helmets protect your head, not location or voice
TL;DR Livall smart ski and bike helmet app leaks the wearers real time position Group audio chat allows snooping on conversations Both issues are due to missing authorisation...
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OpenSSF (Linux Foundation) ☛ OpenSSF Securing Software Repositories Working Group Releases Principles for Package Repository Security
Today, the OpenSSF Securing Software Repositories Working Group released v0.1 of Principles for Package Repository Security, a framework for package repositories to assess their current security capabilities and to help roadmap future improvements.
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TecAdmin ☛ The Developer’s Roadmap to Angular Version Upgrades
Before diving into the upgrade process, it’s essential to understand why keeping your Angular application updated is important. Newer versions of Angular not only offer improved performance and bug fixes but also introduce new features and better security measures.
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Reproducible Builds: Reproducible Builds at FOSDEM 2024
Core Reproducible Builds developer Holger Levsen presented at the main track at FOSDEM on Saturday 3rd February this year in Brussels, Belgium. Titled Reproducible Builds: The First Ten Years…
In this talk Holger ‘h01ger’ Levsen will give an overview about Reproducible Builds: How it started with a small BoF at DebConf13 (and before), then grew from being a Debian effort to something many projects work on together, until in 2021 it was mentioned in an Executive Order of the President of the United States. And of course, the talk will not end there, but rather outline where we are today and where we still need to be going, until Debian stable (and other distros!) will be 100% reproducible, verified by many.