Note to @RоryMcCune: In addition to Jekyll written in Ruby, there's also Pelican written in Python. Same idea: you write your content in markdown et.al., and it generates static sites.
Pelican uses Jinja for templates. Which is WAAAY cooler than Jekyll's silly concoction.
I get the feeling there's something stupid I've missed (though I've already checked show hidden/system files etc) but it's too late in the morning for me to trust any of my thought processes.
@Iszi no clue, if you were a normal user I would ask you the following questions: are you sure you are looking to the same path? and are you really sure you are trying against the same machine?
And the last, is there another PC with the very same host name?
@kiBytes I see less in CMD than I do in Explorer on the host locally, and even less when I browse the file system remotely. The former two are done via RDP so I'm fairly sure it's on.
I'm learning pen-testing and for hands-on training they gave us the Web Security Dojo VM to try evil stuff on.
I am trying to crack this code for a long time but couldn't figure it out.
<?php
$file = $_GET['page']; //The page we wish to display
// Only allow include.php
if ( $file ...
@AviD Well, my point was that there's very little to be learned by asking the guys on the internet to solve your task for you. Maybe not "homework" but still kinda pointless. Besides, I can think of about two dozen ways of exploiting that code...
tldr/for all those who dont really care to know how computers work but still want to know what is up: I think probably most of my friends aren't really computer or computer security minded, so I'm going to provide a bit of an explanation to anyone who might come across this who has no idea what I...
@TerryChia hmm, on web apps I start by fingerprinting what tech is in use, look for packaged products, look for "interesting" functionality, basically get an idea of what might be liable to have issues
in terms of tools, I'll generally run nikto on apps to find dumb stuff but after that it's mostly just burp
@kalina Oh no, sweetie. You've said you'd rather catch something fatal. In my case, however, I'm 100% sure I will catch something fatal in the unfortunate case we make physical contact.
@Adnan So, if I get this correctly, and I'll admit I haven't read all of it, you're saying that each time you come from work, you rinse your member? Dear lord, which industry you work in, again?
@TildalWave No no, I fully agree. Fort hat particular reason I don't have full showers (with vigorous cleaning and scrubbing) more than once every two days.
Washing too frequently with soap and whatnot will damage your skin and even with water alone you're just inviting fungal friends to stay over. Plus, you're risking allergies and worse simply for being too clean. Yes, there is such a thing.
It is pronounced like Japanese (but with a strange accented "sho", and an strange stop in that syllable), also it is almost pronounced like I would pronounce it in Spanish
@kiBytes Nice thing about Finnish is that it doesn't have special pronunciation rules. Each letter has one sound (consonant or vowel) and one sound only. When letters form a word, they're simply pronounced by putting those static sounds one after the other.
@TerryChia Nope, it's just something I enjoyed doing when I first came here.
Ah, good days.
My move with Finns is "Hey, I'm foreigner, I study and work, look at how cute I am when I mispronounce difficult Finnish words. Wanna come home with me?"
@TerryChia Dude, it doesn't matter. I can't remember how many nights I was Andreas, Pedro, George, Jack, Mikael (well actually my middle name), or Aki.
@RоryMcCune The following isn't a joke. If a well-made Surströmming can is opened somewhere outdoors, it's safe to assume that up to a radius of 10-20m people will puke.
If opened indoors, it's safe to assume that anybody in any room in the house will puke.
If you spill some the "juices" of the can on a couch, you really cannot get rid of the smell at all. The only way is just to throw it away and get a new one.