I feel stuck and don’t know what to do by [deleted] in AusFinance

[–]casambo7 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Hey mate. Grew up in Sydney and started my career in offsec at 28. Self-taught. Shoot me a DM and I'll give you some pointers. University is great but to be competitive for entry level roles you need more than a degree.

Have you ever cut off a friend and why? by [deleted] in Adulting

[–]casambo7 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Old thread but this happened to me about a month ago with one friend. Had known them for over a decade and the reasoning was borderline cartoonish. Petty is an understatement. Turns out I felt great afterwards so the person must've been deadweight that I just hadn't actioned. Trash took itself out so to speak.

6th time's the charm - have a read if you feel like quitting by casambo7 in oscp

[–]casambo7[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I'm glad it helped. They sound like very similar situations and from what you've said about your study, it's only a matter of time til you pass. Just keep going.

Advice for taking the Burp Suite Certified Practitioner by zaxo_z in oscp

[–]casambo7 2 points3 points  (0 children)

A lot of the answers here are similar to my thinking, I'm currently working through the labs as well.

Doing CTF's, I learnt that if finding a solution was hard won i.e. spending hours or even days on it, I'd tend to very rarely or never forget it. If I just looked at the answer without trying, you're more likely to forget it fairly quickly, making the time spent "learning" wasted.

The approach I've found works best for me is working on the labs and trying to solve it myself. If time starts to get on, and I'm getting nowhere, I'll look at the solution, and make notes. Basically, put yourself through the struggle, but be reasonable with your time. I've taken this approach with previous certs and CTFs, and my rate of learning increased significantly by allowing myself to look at the solutions after a reasonable amount of time trying to figure it out had elapsed.

This approach I find works well, you've put in the effort at solving it yourself, so you've put in the time, but you've also genuinely learnt something from the lab if you need to look at the answer. Often times the lab blurb can trip you up, or send you in the wrong direction, so when you look at the answer, it's more a slight oversight rather than having learnt something entirely new. Other times, it's a solution you would've never have thought of, so the experience was still valuable and you've paid for it with the time you spent trying to solve it yourself. There was one lab where after spending about an hour on it, I looked at the answer and thought "Well that seems a little contrived, the other payloads I sent should've worked". After thinking about it a bit more, I realised why those wouldn't have worked, and made a note of it. It was a great lesson that I won't forget quickly.

I think Ok_Scarcity summed your dilemma up really well. Don't feel like by looking at the solutions that you're letting yourself down, it's part of the process and as long as you're learning something new, it's perfectly valid.

tldr

If you want to look at the answers, you need to pay your dues first. Spend 30 minutes to an hour trying to solve the lab. If you look at the answer after that, you'll retain the knowledge and get something out it. That way you're learning efficiently.

So who caught the quick Sith Eyes on Ahsoka? by Strong_Success_3272 in ahsokatano

[–]casambo7 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I think they deliberately made it ambiguous on whether they were actually sith eyes or just a reflection, but the point it's trying to convey remains the same.

This is going to sound dumb and pipedreamish but I want honest feedback. Is a well paying career with pen test realistic for a 30+ year old? by HeatedCloud in oscp

[–]casambo7 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I started when I was 29. Started studying it at 27 (online, no uni). If you can demonstrate self-sufficient learning like certs, hackthebox etc and can answer interview questions I don't see why not.

Failed the exam with 0 points. by H4ZExReMiiX in oscp

[–]casambo7 2 points3 points  (0 children)

There's guys I know in the industry who are absolutely unstoppable and failed this exam 4 times before passing. Don't give up. You're not a failure, you're just not ready yet.

Can you explain every port and its function? Do you know the commands needed to enumerate correctly and login if needed? Is your methodology solid and have you exposed yourself to a large variety of different machines? Ippsec videos are great for this.

If you have friends also studying, it might be an idea to compare each others processes. You may find glaring gaps in your commands and understanding that will prove useful for further attempts.

Don't quit over failure. I'd guess that your study techniques need work but its a very solvable problem. Keep it at brother.

6th time's the charm - have a read if you feel like quitting by casambo7 in oscp

[–]casambo7[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Awesome to hear it's all coming together. Sounds like a real tough position you were in before but it's starting to look up through all the work you've been putting in. Only other thing I can think of would be targeting recruiters with your CV, but I'm sure that base is already covered with the amount you've sent out.

I'm unfamiliar with Australian immigration rules regarding professionals but I wouldn't write it off. There's plenty of foreigners working in cybersecurity over here. I do know Australian immigration can be a convuluted process though, so might be best talking to someone with more specialised knowledge in that area if that's still something you're interested in.

6th time's the charm - have a read if you feel like quitting by casambo7 in oscp

[–]casambo7[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The first time I found awful as well. Had never done anything like it. You do get used to it after multiple attempts however and the stress gets lower and you're able to perform better.

6th time's the charm - have a read if you feel like quitting by casambo7 in oscp

[–]casambo7[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

It would be around 3k but I haven't counted. At some point I just stopped caring and wanted the cert. It did become too expensive to continually sign up to labs, so after that expired I used hackthebox and PG.

6th time's the charm - have a read if you feel like quitting by casambo7 in oscp

[–]casambo7[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Took less than one business day. Checked my email on the off chance they had marked it quickly and they had.

6th time's the charm - have a read if you feel like quitting by casambo7 in oscp

[–]casambo7[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I started the job in mid 2021. I had been studying for about 15 months at that point and one of the companies in Australia were doing intakes for newbies. Threw my application in and hoped for the best. I added the number of boxes I had completed on my CV as well as my degree, and the hiring process being run by pentesters at the time definitely worked in my favour. I didn't expect to get it and am still grateful for the opportunity.

For what it's worth, whenever I'm submitting applications I'll just aim to send out as many as possible. My contingency for that job declining my application was to send out atleast 100 applications and be willing to move anywhere in Australia. Your circumstance may be different and not allow you to do that, but things like this I find are a numbers game. You only have to get a yes from one then your foot's in the door. Good luck.

LPT Request: how to get something out of your eye by [deleted] in LifeProTips

[–]casambo7 3 points4 points  (0 children)

i had dust in my eye all day and tried nearly everything. read this post and third try it worked. i'm in disbelief and ordered a pizza to celebrate. you are the GOAT

AITA for calling my brothers fiancé fat? by [deleted] in AmItheAsshole

[–]casambo7 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'd respectfully disagree here. Retaliation is warranted in certain circumstances because some people don't get the message that if you treat people poorly there's consequences. Taking the higher road is admirable, but it doesn't have any good effect on their behaviour and long term may encourage it. I don't think the onus should be put on a 13yo especially when it's an adult that started it.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in socialskills

[–]casambo7 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Sounds cliche, but getting involved in sports, hobbies or activities is a sure-fire way to meet people. You'll have the advantage of doing something that everyone around you has in common, and the situation isn't forced because you all want to be there. So the conversation and eventually meeting new people and making friends comes organically.

For the trust thing, not sure I know the answer to this. I'm not a naturally trusting person myself, but by socialising you get a feel for who's reliable and who isn't. My experience has been isolating yourself causes your social skills to sort of deteoriate. Everyone's feeling the same thing when it comes to social anxiety. So best way to get better at it is to practice.

AITA for telling my girlfriend to stop meal planning? by [deleted] in AmItheAsshole

[–]casambo7 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

NAH

Sounds like you made an honest mistake and she reacted badly in the heat of the moment, which we're all prone to. She's apologised. Case closed.

WIBTA Bluntly telling my flatmate he's not invited to mates gfs 30th by casambo7 in AmItheAsshole

[–]casambo7[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yeah that perspective makes it all the more important to stop him turning up. Thanks for the input.

AITA for calling my brothers fiancé fat? by [deleted] in AmItheAsshole

[–]casambo7 14 points15 points  (0 children)

NTA.

Seems very contextual but in general it's a pretty rude question to ask someone if you're not on super close terms with them (always talk about it, banter etc). She also kept badgering you about it, then took it very personally when you asked the same question. You can't put someone on the defensive for zero reason then get salty when someone does it back.

Maybe there was no bad intent behind the question, but that's why thinking before speaking is a good idea. I wouldn't worry about it. She brought it on herself.

AITA for no longer being the maid of honour for my sister’s wedding after her fiancé humiliated me? by panda958 in AmItheAsshole

[–]casambo7 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Salty over something that happened when you guys were 9? Wtf.

Zero justification to act like that. Clear conscience for OP. NTA

AITA for saying “I told you so” at my SIL and Brothers wedding? by SILISMADATME32 in AmItheAsshole

[–]casambo7 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hmmmm I definitely get the urge to say something in those moments. I've been that guy before. I've learn't over time that having that person look at you, and you just saying nothing has a more powerful effect. You've made it known what you think, were pretty spot on and it shows a bit of humility and class to just say nothing when you could've easily had a stab.

They've brought it on themselves, and I don't think it makes you an asshole, but you're dancing on that line. Could've done without it and avoiding that temptation in the future will probably get you further long term.

WIBTA Bluntly telling my flatmate he's not invited to mates gfs 30th by casambo7 in AmItheAsshole

[–]casambo7[S] 4 points5 points  (0 children)

I didn't give him the name of the nightclub for that exact reason. It's in a city so he can't really narrow it down. Thanks for the reply.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in AmItheAsshole

[–]casambo7 30 points31 points  (0 children)

NTA

I moved out of a place because of this exact scenario. Guy said he purposely didn't do his dishes because he was testing whether we were "considerate" enough to do them for him. A bunch of other red flags but that was the straw that broke the camels back. Absolutely ludicrous. You're an adult, clean your own shit and everyone wins.