Why don't you call your boss in and show him this post :D And a few more pictures of the company and the server would be nice. If any malicious person got hold of that info you would be a target for sure hehehe
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Why don't you call your boss in and show him this post :D And a few more pictures of the company and the server would be nice. If any malicious person got hold of that info you would be a target for sure hehehe
Well ok thats like going into a calculus class and the teacher saying here are 5 really good books to read and be back here at the end of the semester for the final. There is only so much you can read, but without a teacher there it is a lot harder and takes a lot longer. Right now I am trying to find the difference between Autoscan and Nmap.
OMG he said
"Look in to some networking basics courses, sysadmin basics courses, then maybe some ethical hacking courses, security 101 courses, some VA/PenTest methodologies, etc. It's time to get your learn on before you break something and make work for yourself and others."
COURSES! AS IN COURSES AT SCHOOL. AS IN COURSES WITH TEACHERS! Omg, If I had a stick right now, I swear to god!
well I left school a year early, I've never been on any course, I've never needed a teacher to tell me how to do this and read that.
Mortifix sort it out m8, you obliviously have made out you are more than you say you are. And if a company has employed you to carry out pentest work more fool them. I hope you get a grilling for trying but **** it it would be funny to see you **** up just don't forget to send us the picture of your boss booting your ass out the office after you cost them time and money hahaha
Do you even understand that concept that you should never do what you're wanting to do on production machines without explicit authority?
Some devices are very sensitive to some kinds of scans and some scans can actually indeed bring down an entire network.
Unless you know EXACTLY what you're doing, you shouldn't be doing it.
It's that friggin simple.
Hence the first part of the answer was TAKE SOME COURSES.
It's rocket science really.Quote:
Look in to some networking basics courses, sysadmin basics courses, then maybe some ethical hacking courses, security 101 courses, some VA/PenTest methodologies, etc. It's time to get your learn on before you break something and make work for yourself and others.
http://www.google.com/search?q=nmap
http://insecure.org/nmap/
http://www.google.ca/search?q=autoscanQuote:
Nmap ("Network Mapper") is a free and open source (license) utility for network exploration or security auditing. Many systems and network administrators also find it useful for tasks such as network inventory, managing service upgrade schedules, and monitoring host or service uptime. Nmap uses raw IP packets in novel ways to determine what hosts are available on the network, what services (application name and version) those hosts are offering, what operating systems (and OS versions) they are running, what type of packet filters/firewalls are in use, and dozens of other characteristics. It was designed to rapidly scan large networks, but works fine against single hosts.
http://autoscan-network.com/index.ph...d=16&Itemid=30
Wow that took a whole 0.43 seconds for each search, 1 sec for two clicks, maybe 15 sec to read both paragraphs. What an investment of time :eek:Quote:
AutoScan is an application designed to explore and to manage your network. Entire subnets can be scanned simultaneously without human intervention. The objective of the program is to post the list of all equipment connected to the network. A list of ports preset is scanned for each equipment.
Basically AutoScan is nmap with training wheels. It tries to get you the same type of information but may not be as successful or as configurable.
If I use Nmap to scan a port range, is that the same as using Autoscan? I have ran both and they seem to both turn up the same results.
Obviously he does not.
Hahaha ya lets hope he doesn't work at any type of manufacturing plant or major utility. Can we say SCADA + VA = BAD BAD BAD!!!!!Quote:
Some devices are very sensitive to some kinds of scans and some scans can actually indeed bring down an entire network.
This is completely true and it should be that simple.Quote:
Unless you know EXACTLY what you're doing, you shouldn't be doing it.
It's that friggin simple.