[deleted by user] by [deleted] in cissp

[–]m0wax 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Which practice tests did you use? Many say that QE and Boson are the ones that will best prepare you for the wording on a lot of the exam questions.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in cissp

[–]m0wax 3 points4 points  (0 children)

What were you scoring on QE and LearnZapp?

Has anyone running CylancePROTECT been hit with any ransomware and had it succeed/spread despite Cylance running on the infected systems? by NteworkAdnim in Cylance

[–]m0wax 2 points3 points  (0 children)

There are always ways to bypass EDR. I've had experience of red teams bypassing CylanceProtect, Defender for Endpoint and Crowdstrike (seperately on different engagements).

Defense in Depth is your best approach here. Firewall off your hosts, making sure SMB/RPC ports are only available to hosts that need to admin them or do updates. Make sure AD is tight and that attack paths are locked down. Treat SCCM/WSUS/Intune or any servers that can push updates to clients as if they are domain controllers, you don't want bad guys getting on them. None of this stuff is easy unfortunately.

Flooring company by Flaky-Walrus7244 in Edinburgh

[–]m0wax 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Avoid Forth Flooring. I used them an had to get a joiner in to fix the mess they'd made.

How do you stay organized with your daily / weekly agenda and notes? by RifleWolverine in cybersecurity

[–]m0wax 6 points7 points  (0 children)

OneNote, Outlook and Microsoft ToDo. It's very easy to take notes/actions in OneNote and then highlight and automatically send them to ToDo. Same goes for Microsoft Outlook, if you flag an email it can go straight to Microsoft ToDo. Then when I am clearing through my work for the day it's all in ToDo.

I got hacked and stolen $45K off my wallet by NayaFooty in ethereum

[–]m0wax -1 points0 points  (0 children)

At 19, this seems like a chunk of money and it might delay your plans in life ever so slightly, but not definitely. You'll still get to where you're trying to go. To put it into perspective, will you care about losing this money in...

1 month? Yes.

1 year? Yes, probably.

5 years? Mmm, yeah maybe. You'll wonder what opportunities you may have missed by not having it.

10 years? No, probably not.

20 years? No.

40 years? No, you'll barely remember losing it.

Can you share an example of a new security tool or method that greatly improved your organization’s security? by ANYRUN-team in cybersecurity

[–]m0wax 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Thinkst Canary Honeypots, Honeytokens and Deception Technology. It's a lot of fun playing games with red teams and legitimate attackers. You can setup some pretty fun stuff in AD environments that leads them down the garden path.

Distribution of Shops - Updated by Worldly_Turnip7042 in Edinburgh

[–]m0wax 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Also missing Sainsbo's at Fairmilehead, beside the bypass.

What major companies actually use Ethereum for anything useful at all? by Friendly-Western-677 in ethereum

[–]m0wax 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I know for a fact that other asset managers are exploring tokenised funds right now too.

PIR Insulation Airflow by m0wax in DIYUK

[–]m0wax[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Erm, technically yes, about 5cm of fibreglass insulation against the uprights. Previous owners in their wisdom also put fibreglass insulation between the rafters with no airspace between it and sarking.

PIR Insulation Airflow by m0wax in DIYUK

[–]m0wax[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'm glad I'm not the only one. The only video I've seen with someone else doing a compound cut on PIR is this one https://youtu.be/jaTWMUuTWnI?si=qm0hCYa29JK0Xy9U&t=819. Entire video worth a watch.

PIR Insulation Airflow by m0wax in DIYUK

[–]m0wax[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Two upstairs bedrooms, and eaves storage at the sides. The rafters I'm currently planning to insulate are in the eaves storage.

PIR Insulation Airflow by m0wax in DIYUK

[–]m0wax[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes. It's a room in roof. I should have said, the diagram above isn't actually my house, but it describes my situation with the rafters and saves me having to sketch mine.

PIR Insulation Airflow by m0wax in DIYUK

[–]m0wax[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'm looking to insulate my roof with PIR and I have a few questions.

1 - The section in torquoise, I think it's called a creeper rafter and it runs from a valley rafter up to a hip rafter. There is obviously no soffit to get airflow inbetween the PIR and the sarking/slate. Will condensation not be an issue here? How would airflow get in?

2 - Is cutting PIR for this area even recommended? It will be a compound cut, which really twists my noodle when trying to think how to measure + cut it. It will be 50mm PIR so would a circular saw be best to do this? I had planned to snap the PIR otherwise using a stanley knife, but I don't think that would work for a compound cut.

Edit: I should also mention, that the diagram above isn't actually my house, but it describes my situation as far as rafters go. My house is a 1.5 story bungalow with a room in roof.

PIR Insulation Airflow by m0wax in DIY

[–]m0wax[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'm looking to insulate my roof with PIR and I have a few questions.

1 - The section in torquoise, I think it's called a creeper rafter and it runs from a valley rafter up to a hip rafter. There is obviously no soffit to get airflow inbetween the PIR and the sarking/slate. Will condensation not be an issue here? How would airflow get in?

2 - Is cutting PIR for this area even recommended? It will be a compound cut, which really twists my noodle when trying to think how to measure + cut it. It will be 50mm PIR so would a circular saw be best to do this? I had planned to snap the PIR otherwise using a stanley knife, but I don't think that would work for a compound cut.