With kerbrute.py:
python kerbrute.py -domain <domain_name> -users <users_file> -passwords <passwords_file> -outputfile <output_file>
With Rubeus version with brute module:
#!/usr/bin/env bash | |
# | |
# IMPORTANT: The HTTP authorization header must be found | |
# in ~/.openai in full, not just the API key. | |
# | |
# Usage: ./documentarist.sh [options] /path/to/file.c | |
# | |
# Requirements: dos2unix, cpp, clang-format, jq, curl | |
# |
With kerbrute.py:
python kerbrute.py -domain <domain_name> -users <users_file> -passwords <passwords_file> -outputfile <output_file>
With Rubeus version with brute module:
Recently more and more chatbots appear, the overall chatbot market grows and the platform for it grows as well. Today we are taking a close look at what benefits creating a microservice chatbot on Discord - (a communication platform mainly targeted at gamers) would provide.
The concepts and ideas explained in this whitepaper are geared towards bots with a bigger userbase where the limits of a usual bot style appear with a greater effect
(If you are already proficient with the Discord API and the way a normal bot works, you may skip ahead to The Concept)
Want to inject some flavor into your everyday text chat? You're in luck! Discord uses Markdown, a simple plain text formatting system that'll help you make your sentences stand out. Here's how to do it! Just add a few characters before & after your desired text to change your text! I'll show you some examples...
What this guide covers:
This work, excluding the Arch Linux logo, is made available under CC0: https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/ |
/* | |
* Simple MD5 implementation | |
* | |
* Compile with: gcc -o md5 md5.c | |
*/ | |
#include <stdlib.h> | |
#include <string.h> | |
#include "md5.h" |
/* | |
* Simple MD5 implementation | |
* | |
* Compile with: gcc -o md5 md5.c | |
*/ | |
#include <stdlib.h> | |
#include <string.h> | |
#include "md5.h" |
#!/bin/bash | |
################################################################ | |
# Install a printer on Arch Linux with cups using command line # | |
# Used for a HP PSC 1510 with default driver # | |
################################################################ | |
sudo pacman -S cups | |
sudo systemctl start org.cups.cupsd |
I could not find a proper, detailed (and up-to-date) reverse-engineerment
of Omegle's text chat protocol on the internet, so here, have one made by analyzing the web app (web requests and source code).
The responses are beautified and the query strings split up and URI-decoded for
readability.
Note that "query string" refers to parameters encoded into the URL and
"form data" to parameters in the POST body which do not have to be URI-encoded.
TODO:
As configured in my dotfiles.
start new:
tmux
start new with session name: