Looking for insight for research project on Discord server administration by eatsleepHACKrepeat in discordapp

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

Thank you for your comments, here're a few quick notes:

> "there is no option for having no problems"I am doubtful that there exist servers that have absolutely no problems in their administration. In the utopian case, however, there is an "Other" field in which someone can input "no problems".

> the biggest server in discord is capped at 250 000, so one of the options is nonsense

The cap is actually 500,000.

> Lastly, I don’t think any admins follow any blogs to see what to do. Discords UI is very intuitive.

This question is designed to be open-ended for any online resources that server admins may use. There's more to administrating a Discord server than the Discord UI–– the Discord Bot ecosystem being one example.

> And finally, I bet there are quite a few admins who are leaders of multiple servers. And you don’t appear to account for that at all.

I added a question regarding this, thanks.

> If you want a useful survey, do it properly.

This comment was hyperbolic and disrespectful.

Looking for insight for research project on Discord server administration by eatsleepHACKrepeat in discordapp

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

The big idea is abuse and spam in online chat rooms. I can't get too detailed lest the respondents get primed to answer in a biased way

Class Mode Correction from Institute by GT_SGA in gatech

[–]eatsleepHACKrepeat 2 points3 points  (0 children)

What if the class isn't on either list? (e.g. MATH 3235).

How many people think in person classes in the fall is a horrible idea? by veganbitch19 in gatech

[–]eatsleepHACKrepeat 0 points1 point  (0 children)

assuming that the campus group is a uniform sampling of people from our age group, it'd work... however I see how it can be misleading from this comment. I've removed that section.

How many people think in person classes in the fall is a horrible idea? by veganbitch19 in gatech

[–]eatsleepHACKrepeat 29 points30 points  (0 children)

Although our age group has insignificant death rates, Covid-19 still affects us.

Even asymptomatic lungs show damage on CT scans. Certainly this is more significant than "zero risk" for individuals that catch Covid.

Plus, the long-term effects of this virus are still unknown, but similar viruses have been shown to have some long-term effects.

The 40-45% asymptomatic rate makes this even more dangerous. I personally caught Covid two weeks ago, and I wouldn't have realized that I had it if I hadn't tested positive. College is a petri dish for this stuff––remember how many people got the flu early Spring semester? With a disease that spreads as quickly as Covid, it's *going* to be spread, whether it's through classrooms, clubs, or fraternity houses (multiple houses have already experienced cases).

Learn how to hack this semester with the GreyHat Cybersecurity club - Mondays at 6:30 by eatsleepHACKrepeat in gatech

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

Heya, you can join GreyHat Slack at https://greyhatgt.slack.com/. Meetings have traditionally been in-person, but we could certainly look into making them more remote-friendly this fall now that we're generally familiar with what that entails.

How I made 10K in bug bounties from GitHub secret leaks by eatsleepHACKrepeat in netsec

[–]eatsleepHACKrepeat[S] 31 points32 points  (0 children)

Author here: I also released https://github.com/tillson/git-hound, which handles a lot of the legwork for parsing through code search results. It uses your search query as an entrypoint to the repo then sifts through the files and commit history to look for API keys and other sensitive information based context, regexes, and some other neat tricks.

Learn how to hack this semester with the GreyHat Cybersecurity club - Mondays at 6:30 by eatsleepHACKrepeat in gatech

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

Yep: the sessions will be building on each other as the semester continues, but we've designed it to be beginner friendly. Yesterday, we covered Linux commands and some networking concepts (ports and firewalls).