Skip to main content

Posts

Showing posts from January, 2014

Kali Linux Images

Below are the links of Kali Linux's ISO images repository that you may found helpful in upgrading or downgrading Kali Linux. Kali Linux 1.0.6 Kali Linux 1.0.5 Kali Linux 1.0.4 Kali Linux 1.0.3 Kali Linux 1.0.2 Kali Linux 1.0

Top 10 Security Tools

Below are the tools that developers consider to be the top 10 security tools that could be covered to some benefit to people considering putting Kali Linux into their network security toolbox. aircrack-ng burpsuite hydra john maltego metasploit framework nmap owasp-zap sqlmap wireshark

Installing TOR browser

There are many ways of installing TOR but an easy step is to go to TOR website, download, extract the file and install it on Kali Linux. So, here we go. STEPS: 1. Go to www.torproject.org . 2. Click on Download . 3. Navigate 32 bit or 64 bit for GNU/Linux , click on Download and then select Save file and press ok . 4. Once the file is downloaded, open terminal and type cd command to go to the directory where the file has been downloaded. 5. Decompress the file by running tar with xvzf   parameters. 6. Once the file is decompressed, goto the tor folder. 7. Edit the file start-tor-browser  in a text editor, like leafpad, by giving admin right 8. Run the browser, either by clicking on  start-tor-browser  or through terminal window by typing  ./start-tor-browser . Now let's see these by an example. Let's say, at the time of release, the filename of the tor browser is tor-browser-gnu-linux-i686-2.3.25-15-dev-en-US.tar.gz (for 32-bit, it may different depending on the architectur

Kali Linux 1.0.6 has been released

Kali Linux 1.0.6 released with a new 3.12 kernel, a LUKS nuke feature, new Kali ARM build scripts, and Kali AMAZON AMI and Google Compute image generation scripts, not to mention numerous tool additions and updates – this release is really heavily laden with goodness. This new release brings with it the introduction of the Offensive Security Trusted ARM image scripts – a set of slowly growing scripts that are able to build Kali Linux images for various ARM devices. These scripts will replace the growing number of actual ARM image releases we have in order to reduce the exponentially growing amount of traffic we serve on each release.