2018-12-07 13:30:24: (request.c.648) request-URI parse error -> 400 for: index.php/admin
2018-12-07 13:30:26: (request.c.648) request-URI parse error -> 400 for:
2018-12-07 13:31:06: (request.c.648) request-URI parse error -> 400 for: odoo_cmr/web/login
2018-12-07 13:31:06: (request.c.648) request-URI parse error -> 400 for: CMR/web/login
2018-12-07 13:31:18: (request.c.648) request-URI parse error -> 400 for:
2018-12-07 13:31:26: (request.c.648) request-URI parse error -> 400 for: zenbership-master/admin/login.php
2018-11-17 23:19:07: (request.c.648) request-URI parse error -> 400 for: http://www.123cha.com
2018-11-17 23:23:37: (request.c.648) request-URI parse error -> 400 for: www.baidu.com:443
2018-11-17 23:23:38: (request.c.648) request-URI parse error -> 400 for: www.voanews.com:443
2018-11-17 23:23:42: (request.c.648) request-URI parse error -> 400 for: cn.bing.com:443
2018-11-20 12:35:53: (request.c.648) request-URI parse error -> 400 for: www.baidu.com
2018-11-20 12:35:54: (request.c.648) request-URI parse error -> 400 for: http://www.123cha.com
2018-11-20 12:35:56: (request.c.648) request-URI parse error -> 400 for: cn.bing.com:443
2018-11-20 12:35:57: (request.c.648) request-URI parse error -> 400 for: www.voanews.com:443
2018-11-20 12:36:01: (request.c.648) request-URI parse error -> 400 for: www.baidu.com:443
2018-11-26 01:16:32: (request.c.648) request-URI parse error -> 400 for: www.baidu.com
2018-11-26 01:16:36: (request.c.648) request-URI parse error -> 400 for: cn.bing.com:443
2018-11-26 01:16:42: (request.c.648) request-URI parse error -> 400 for: www.baidu.com:443
2018-11-26 01:16:43: (request.c.648) request-URI parse error -> 400 for: www.voanews.com:443
I am not thinking of doing damage to other people. Just a question that came to my mind when I saw that there are Linux distros used for hacking, but find nothing about the BSD.
There was a time when DefCon was full of Linux guys, now they come with FreeBSD. I have visited DEFCON 26, it was 50/50 BSD/Linux users. I would say more BSD users as Linux was mostly thrown inside a VM of macOS. As they said, ZFS rollback was the primary reason they switched to FreeBSD. I had been pen-testing with a Debian stable machine since long, until few years ago I moved to FreeBSD. Now I hack around breaking various architectures, trying to port FreeBSD, even for my HTC M8 (bricked now, but still working on it). It's something so fun that you won't understand without actually doing it.
The cool thing with NetBSD and OpenBSD, it is much much more secured than Linux.
Hacking is for bending software to do their bidding. Cracking is for breaking into things where one should not be. All crackers are hackers but not all hackers are crackers.
That said, I have never read an actual book on hacking so I could easily have been wrong all these years.
I have that one tooI own a copy of Hacking Exposed: Network Security Secrets and Solutions I bought new in 1999.
True for most books I've bought.have never read it
I have to weigh in, lol. I am a web application penetration tester (white hat). I break into web applications and test vulnerabilities because that's what my employer pays me to do. I use Kali Linux at work, only because I am not allowed to use FreeBSD and I use FreeBSD at home to do the same thing in my test lab. FreeBSD works perfectly well for this. I need a minimum of tools to do this because frankly, most of what I do is manual.
I believe the OP meant "hacking" in the sense of breaking into apps. I know the term "hacking" meant something different originally and am aware of its history, but the term's meaning has morphed over the years. I still call myself a hacker because I (with authorization), break into web apps. I don't call myself a "cracker" because that has a negative racial connotation, or used to anyway. I am definitely not a hacker in the sense that RMS intended when he (I think?) coined the term.
Extrapolating from that attitude, you probably don't like fire fighters or fire safety inspectors either. That implies that you prefer to die by burning. Obviously, I don't mean that remark literally. Instead, I'm just trying to demonstrate the ethical implications of what you just said.I am against white hat hacking, can't personally stand by info sec people helping some nasty corporations.
I hope my bank hired few white hats when it designed its website. Same for the national healthcare website. Don't you ?I am against white hat hacking, can't personally stand by info sec people helping some nasty corporations.
I hope my bank hired few white hats when it designed its website. Same for the national healthcare website. Don't you ?
Just leave itExtrapolating from that attitude, you probably don't like fire fighters or fire safety inspectors either. That implies that you prefer to die by burning. Obviously, I don't mean that remark literally. Instead, I'm just trying to demonstrate the ethical implications of what you just said.
Out of curiosity, why is NetBSD so difficult when it comes to finding answers to issues and surprisingly dealing with ports and packages! I'd love for it to become just like FreeBSD.