hee)quakers...frosties..chocolates andetcetcetc (I'm trying my best to keep it healthy)2) post-its pasted by leon right in front of us while we were mugging .. one hour ride from my home, met him, took bus to his home, yes not taxi.. and we went into his condo void deck hoping to get some personal time tgt after like 2 whole weeks, and then this security guard saw us (apparently they're frenz) so that insensitive guy jus keep talking to us for like super long.. when he didnt seem to hav the intention to go away and spare us, we decided it was time for home.. heheei wana thank God for my dad and mom.. words are never enough to say it all.a wonderful church service, sunday school and fellowship timewhich totally spoke to me, to let go, not to hold too tightly, to learn to lean on God, not on own manipulation, plans and anxiety. learn to receive God's blessings and not to take it on myself.thank you God for the repeated unfading reminders.
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Tomorrow morning, maybe not quite at dawn, I will unpack, brew some strong coffee and get back into reporting from Carroll Gardens.Have I have missed something important?
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Check out the video above to see this simple script in action.Hey There,Today, we're going to take another look at parsing the output from snoop (good to go on Solaris Unix 8 through 10), as we did in our previous post on finding and printing out logins, passwords and other session information over Telnet. Today, we're going to see what we can find by monitoring FTP port 21 (as opposed to FTP data port 20).Again, a quick note: Today's simple script and demonstration are provided simply to shine a light on a vulnerability that has existed for quite some time, and not as an invitation to illegal activity. I'd like to think that posts, and articles everywhere, on this subject serve as a consistent reminder that, if you really want to try and keep your information secure, you shouldn't use unsecure protocols. For instance, as an alternate to straight-up FTP, programs like SCP and SFTP (Technically a subsystem of SSH, running on port 22) are freely available and would make this method of gaining information impossible.Hopefully this bash shell script will help out a few sys admins out there. Actually, getting information from FTP port 21 is so simple that the script could actually be written on one succinct command line.Rather than go into a long convoluted dissection of how the process works (which we beat to death in our post on grabbing passwords with snoop over Telnet), I've attached a small video to this post (see above). If you can, download it and play it in slow motion. The player above should freeeze on the final frame, which is really the shot that shows you how much information you can get by just listening.Note, also, that the one big difference between this script and our last script for grabbing passwords using snoop (other than that we're doing it on FTP port 21) is that this script has been written to take standard input (STDIN) rather than read a binary snoop file. So, you'll need to run it like this:host # snoop -v port 21|./ftppass.shYou can change the original Telnet script also. All you need to do is comment out this part:if [ 0 -ne 1 ]then echo Usage: sh snoop_file exit 1fisnoop_file=if [ ! -f ]then echo Snoop Output does not exist. Exiting! exit 1fiand change this line by removing the
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This is the one view that demonstrates that we are one species, regardless of color or religion, sharing a common home.In our daily struggle for survival, it is easy to forget that.
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Sunday, April 27, 2008
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