Tonight's Outline: Internet ‘Bots: Friend, Foe or I Don’t Know Who is Visiting your Site, and Who are you Visiting? Defense:
- 2018 Internet Traffic: Human and Bot - Why do Bots visit your site? - Tools Used: Raw access log/Http Request Headers, Internet Research, Whois.com: public IP information - The Human Visitor - Good Bots: Search Engines - Bad Bots - Spam: feedback, referrer - Malicious Bots - Anti-bot legislation: US, Canada, Australia, Uk Offense: - Hacking Definition: Breaking into web sites/devices - Hacking subculture - Illegality: Local vs International - the process: 1) reconnaisance, find a vulnerability, hack, 2) create, send a root kit; phishing, deep phishing - hacking tools: NMap, Armitage, Metasploit, all available from the Kali distribution, Open Source - site/server reconnaisance: NMap/Armitage - Metasploit, Vulnerability database lookup - Possible exploits I welcome all discussion. Don On 10 July 2018 at 07:46, hi--- via talk <[email protected]> wrote: > <http://gtalug.org/meeting/2018-07/> > > # Internet Bots w/ Don Tai > > Don Tai shares their experience having explored the ever growing space of > internet bots and web hacking tools. > A discussion of the concepts and tools for: > * Internet traffic: what is bots vs humans? > * Bot traffic signatures: spam bots (feedback, referrer), scrapers, > malicious bot examples > * Observing Bots and Controlling Bots: raw access log, WHOIS, htaccess > * Reconnaissance: NMap, Armitage, Metasploit > * Working with Vulnerability databases > > ## Location > > George Vari Engineering and Computing Centre > 245 Church Street, Room 203 > Ryerson University > > <http://goo.gl/maps/16oJ2> > > <http://www.openstreetmap.org/way/23447525> > > ## Schedule > > * 6:00 pm - Please discuss on the general mailing list (i.e. < > [email protected]>) where you want to go for dinner. > * 7:30 pm - Meeting and presentation. > * 9:00 pm - After each meeting, a group of GTALUGers move to The Imperial > Pub (54 Dundas St East) for refreshments and more socialising. > > # Code of Conduct > > We want a productive happy community that can welcome new ideas, improve > every process every year, and foster collaboration between individuals with > differing needs, interests and skills. > > We gain strength from diversity, and actively seek participation from > those who enhance it. This code of conduct exists to ensure that diverse > groups collaborate to mutual advantage and enjoyment. We will challenge > prejudice that could jeopardise the participation of any person in the > community. > > The Code of Conduct governs how we behave in public or in private whenever > the Linux community will be judged by our actions. We expect it to be > honoured by everyone who represents the community officially or informally, > claims affiliation or participates directly. It applies to activities > online or offline. > > We invite anybody to participate. Our community is open. > > Please read more about the GTALUG Code of Conduct here: < > http://gtalug.org/about/code-of-conduct/>. > > If you have any questions, comments, or concerns about the GTALUG Code of > Conduct please contact the GTALUG Board @ <[email protected]>. > --- > GTALUG Announce mailing list > [email protected] > https://gtalug.org/mailman/listinfo/announce > --- > Talk Mailing List > [email protected] > https://gtalug.org/mailman/listinfo/talk >
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