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YouTube's script kiddie channels to skip

shrekushka

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Most of the time yeah, but for a newbie even this can be a motivation to dive deeper into the sybersec. Also for a quick reference codecamp is not so bad.
Don’t get into cybersecurity just to “hack routers, spy on IP cams or take down three-letter agencies”.
Learn how computers really work. Understand how networks operate.
A strong foundation beats copy-pasting scripts any day. Start with the basics: real hackers build, not just break.
 
I can't disagree with you in the sense that you shouldn't get involved in cybersecurity if you're not passionate about it, especially for the money. (Sooner or later, you might start using substances that will eat up your entire paycheck just to feel a little happier).

Nevertheless, I think you
know that cybersecurity is a very understaffed industry, and sometimes these channels bring in people who are far from computer science but over time perform well.

And lastly, maybe you can provide your list of YouTube channels or literature which would help or which has personally influenced your professional growth?
 
Nevertheless, I think you know that cybersecurity is a very understaffed industry, and sometimes these channels bring in people who are far from computer science but over time perform well.
Debatable + riddled with nuances.
Regardless, that doesn't prove anything.

And lastly, maybe you can provide your list of YouTube channels or literature which would help or which has personally influenced your professional growth?
Vague but let's zero in on a single area: networking.
I'll assume some amount of programming experience.
Really, any standard university textbook will work.
Tanenbaum's Computer Networks for example: starts with the physical layer (bits on wires, fiber optics, even some history) and walks all the way up through app layer protocols.
He actually explains why things are the way they are: "Why do we have layered protocols in the first place?" / "Why does TCP do congestion control this way?”
There are classic bits like for instance: explaining the OSI model with two philosophers discussing their love of rabbits in different langs. It’s a silly scenario but perfectly illustrates protocol layering.
Some books only talk OSI in a token sense before diving entirely into TCP/IP or vice versa. He does a great job of explaining both in parallel, making it easy to see how the “theoretical model” lines up against the actual protocols we use on the internet.
 

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what about the cherno
 
what about the cherno
Pick a standard uni textbook + a Git repo. Everything else's entertainment and/or crap.
 
Debatable + riddled with nuances.
Regardless, that doesn't prove anything.


Vague but let's zero in on a single area: networking.
I'll assume some amount of programming experience.
Really, any standard university textbook will work.
Tanenbaum's Computer Networks for example: starts with the physical layer (bits on wires, fiber optics, even some history) and walks all the way up through app layer protocols.
He actually explains why things are the way they are: "Why do we have layered protocols in the first place?" / "Why does TCP do congestion control this way?”
There are classic bits like for instance: explaining the OSI model with two philosophers discussing their love of rabbits in different langs. It’s a silly scenario but perfectly illustrates protocol layering.
Some books only talk OSI in a token sense before diving entirely into TCP/IP or vice versa. He does a great job of explaining both in parallel, making it easy to see how the “theoretical model” lines up against the actual protocols we use on the internet.
Thank you very much for your reply.

I believe the same principle can be applied to other fields, such as operating systems and programming.
I don’t mean to sound like an old-timer, but back in the day, there wasn’t as much information available. This scarcity sparked a genuine desire in us to search for it, almost like pursuing an ancient grail.
Nowadays, however, people overload their minds with so much irrelevant content that when they finally come across something truly valuable, they immediately suspect there’s a catch.
 
I believe the same principle can be applied to other fields, such as operating systems and programming.
Operating systems, programming, nuclear physics, cosmology, telepathy, clairvoyance, precognition...
 
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If they have some fancy-shmency rgb keyboards and three monitors they're probably gay

My favorite en channel was ippsec with "Hack The Box" walkthrougs long time ago. Mostly script-kiddie stuff for monkeys (don't know what now), but I loved it.
 
Not so much cyber security but i recommend this channel.
 
fancy-shmency rgb keyboards and three monitors
3. an old thinkpad + i only use arch, btw
4. pure C
5. vi, vim, emacs
6. terminal evangelists
7. macbook + single notebook + a plant
8. IKEA showroom
9. custom keycaps
10. starbucks
11. cringey laptop stickers
12. firefox
13. ipad + pencil notes
14. vertical monitor

My favorite en channel was ippsec with "Hack The Box" walkthrougs long time ago.
+
The guy clearly enjoys what he does.

Mostly script-kiddie stuff for monkeys (don't know what now), but I loved it.
2.jpg
 
I like this one
 
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5. vi, vim, emacs
Works fine for me on the weak hardware and big projects with cscope, ack, fzf plugins. Better then waiting a minute to get a function declaration in VS Code, lol.
 


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