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[Help] Hacking in public environments - Printable Version +- Sinisterly (https://sinister.ly) +-- Forum: Hacking (https://sinister.ly/Forum-Hacking) +--- Forum: Network Hacking (https://sinister.ly/Forum-Network-Hacking) +--- Thread: [Help] Hacking in public environments (/Thread-Help-Hacking-in-public-environments) |
RE: [Help] Hacking in public environments - x n - 03-23-2018 (03-23-2018, 03:11 AM)phyrrus9 Wrote:(03-23-2018, 03:07 AM)x n Wrote:(03-21-2018, 02:45 AM)Skullmeat Wrote: I did already know. I just finished the CCNA course less than a month ago. What I told you was discussed and practiced in the course. Everything I put there came from what I learned and is in my head. Just because you've managed to compromise a few consumer grade networks doesn't mean you have what it takes to do it to hardened, enterprise level ones. Instead of acting like you know everything its better to listen to the people here who do know about the topic at hand. You might learn something. If you continue to act like that no one here is going to help you. If I’ve proven that I don’t know anything then go ahead and tell me how anything I’ve said on this thread is wrong unless you’re finally willing to give up this childish game and admit you were wrong. RE: [Help] Hacking in public environments - x n - 03-23-2018 (03-23-2018, 03:20 AM)Satan Wrote:(03-23-2018, 03:07 AM)x n Wrote: Would it really have killed you to say something like "I was wrong, sorry" like I've already done in a case where I was wrong since joining this forum? https://sinister.ly/Thread-Is-there-such-thing-as-hacking?pid=802910#pid802910 RE: [Help] Hacking in public environments - Satan - 03-23-2018 (03-23-2018, 03:21 AM)x n Wrote:(03-23-2018, 03:20 AM)Satan Wrote:(03-23-2018, 03:07 AM)x n Wrote: Would it really have killed you to say something like "I was wrong, sorry" like I've already done in a case where I was wrong since joining this forum? Weird that didn't show up in the search then. RE: [Help] Hacking in public environments - Skullmeat - 03-23-2018 (03-23-2018, 03:07 AM)x n Wrote:(03-21-2018, 02:45 AM)Skullmeat Wrote: I did already know. I just finished the CCNA course less than a month ago. What I told you was discussed and practiced in the course. Everything I put there came from what I learned and is in my head. Just because you've managed to compromise a few consumer grade networks doesn't mean you have what it takes to do it to hardened, enterprise level ones. Instead of acting like you know everything its better to listen to the people here who do know about the topic at hand. You might learn something. If you continue to act like that no one here is going to help you. We shared what we know with you and OP, take our advice or not, that's your choice. However, insulting and flaming our users is against our rules. Quote:Respecting Others https://sinister.ly/misc.php?action=help&hid=8 RE: [Help] Hacking in public environments - x n - 03-23-2018 (03-23-2018, 03:26 AM)Skullmeat Wrote:(03-23-2018, 03:07 AM)x n Wrote:(03-21-2018, 02:45 AM)Skullmeat Wrote: I did already know. I just finished the CCNA course less than a month ago. What I told you was discussed and practiced in the course. Everything I put there came from what I learned and is in my head. Just because you've managed to compromise a few consumer grade networks doesn't mean you have what it takes to do it to hardened, enterprise level ones. Instead of acting like you know everything its better to listen to the people here who do know about the topic at hand. You might learn something. If you continue to act like that no one here is going to help you. That’s odd, that rule didn’t seem to apply when I was called a skid king by phyrrus on multiple occasions. Interesting how that rule works. RE: [Help] Hacking in public environments - phyrrus9 - 03-23-2018 (03-23-2018, 03:28 AM)x n Wrote:(03-23-2018, 03:26 AM)Skullmeat Wrote:(03-23-2018, 03:07 AM)x n Wrote: Whether it's what you practiced in your course or not doesn't matter, you were incorrect to mention it in this case. Sorry that I stepped on your pride and made you look like an idiot for being completely wrong, but -7'ing someone isn't going to make them agree with you nor is it going to make you correct. Would it really have killed you to say something like "I was wrong, sorry" like I've already done in a case where I was wrong since joining this forum? It's funny how you're implying I don't know anything and that you and others who have responded to me know everything when I've consistently told all of you why you're wrong and none of you have been successful in telling me why I'm wrong, and now you're doing what anyone with a damaged ego would do, and you're attacking me rather than the substance of my argument because you know you were wrong. Thanks. I genuinely don't know why everyone hates me, I haven't insulted anybody and all I've tried to do is help people, but there's always a user who thinks they have to look like the smartest person ever and when they try to tell me I'm wrong, I respond with why I'm not wrong and I end up getting -7'd. It's pretty comical. Another debunking, I called you the FORMER skid king, and that happened on all of 1 occasion. This was in @"Synthx"'s thread titled "The new skid king" RE: [Help] Hacking in public environments - mothered - 03-23-2018 (03-23-2018, 03:02 AM)x n Wrote: The MAC address of any device on a network isn't going to be leaked to the internet except in certain implementations of IPv6 As stated In my previous post and as you've just confirmed here, the MAC address of a given device "can" get leaked. It doesn't necessarily mean It "will" be leaked each and every time. (03-23-2018, 03:02 AM)x n Wrote: The DNS server you'd be forced to use would depend on what the library's guest network forces you to use, unless you configure DNS on your computer to use whatever you configure it to use You do not understand the concept and Inner-workings of Transparent DNS proxies. I'm trying to educate you, so please take this under advisement. Irrespective of the DNS settings on your device, If the ISP that you're connected to Is utilizing a Transparent DNS proxy, they (ISP) Intercept all DNS traffic, hence reroute all requests/look ups by forcing the end-user to use "their" DNS servers- regardless of the DNS settings on the device per se. As such, they "transparently" proxy all requests, hence whilst you believe you're using the DNS servers as set on your device, all traffic Is In fact routed via the ISPs. |