• @[email protected]
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    869 months ago

    How are you supposed to fine 7 vulernabilities in an hour anyways? No way they expect the applicant to actually find vulernabilities right? So you need to memorize a bunch and see if they are present, which doesn’t achieve anything other than testing your memorization abilities

    • Hyperreality
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      979 months ago

      How are you supposed to fine 7 vulernabilities in an hour anyways?

      Threaten the interviewer with a knife until they give you at least 7 vulnerabilities. tapsheadmeme

    • fkn
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      829 months ago

      Using Kali? Easy if you have training. The capstone for our security course a decade ago was too find and exploit 5 remote machines (4 on the same network, 1 was on a second network only one of the machines had access to) in an hour with Kali. I found all 5 but could only exploit 3 of them. If I didn’t have to exploit any of them 7 would be reasonably easy to find.

      Kali basically has a library of known exploits and you just run the scanner on a target.

      This isn’t novel exploit discovery. This is “which of these 10 windows machines hasn’t been updated in 3 years?”

      • @[email protected]
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        99 months ago

        Just saying that running automated tools and identifying those vulnerabilities is just the first step to learning hacking, but nothing more. To gain a proper understanding you must be able to find vulnerabilities manually or at least understand a certain exploit such as ETERNALBLUE which you won’t really look for manually.

        • fkn
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          89 months ago

          Sure. But for an entry level interview as a pen tester… Scanning with Kali should be an easy task.

    • @[email protected]
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      399 months ago

      It’s going to be a system set up with known vulnerabilities that should be easy to locate using common tools already installed on Kali; a real world scenario should (at least in theory) not be that simple, but in a capture the flag pentest environment, that’s pretty normal