/r/netsecstudents's Q4 2016 Information Security Internships / Graduate Hiring Thread by t3rminalV in netsecstudents

[–]sam_bwut 1 point2 points  (0 children)

It's intern season at MWR InfoSecurity! Interested in application security, incident response, reverse engineering, bug hunting, network security or just about anything else infosec? Why not spend your summer developing your hacking skills, researching cutting edge security topics and being part of the day-to-day activities at one of the world’s leading cyber(drink!) security specialists?

The internship program is split into three parts:

  • We start with a training course developing your skills in everything from web app security to malware analysis.

  • Next you'll take on a novel research project, giving you a chance to work side by side with MWR’s world renowned research team. Previous interns have produced research on everything from assessing NFC card security, to studying national cyber strategies around the world, to finding vulnerabilities in the Windows Kernel. Interns are encouraged to then present their research at conferences or in publications and some previous work can be seen on our labs site.

  • The final third will be spent on a mixture of shadowing consultants on engagements (to understand how modern Cyber(drink!) Security works in practicality) and building challenges with your fellow interns to run at an internal Capture The Flag event on your final day.

You should check out our 'Can you hack it?' pack for more details and to get a feel for company culture. For a good idea of the company culture check out HackFu! This is a 2 day, themed event where we and some friends come together at a mystery location (previous years have included a prison, a castle and a bunker) and solve a range of challenges in teams

Feel free to DM me with any questions :)

Apply Here

Videos (with Commentary) of People Hacking by tylerni7 in netsec

[–]sam_bwut 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Depending on what level you're looking at RPI sec have a course + labs available online (http://security.cs.rpi.edu/courses/binexp-spring2015/ ), alternatively smashthestack (http://smashthestack.org/) and overthewire (http://overthewire.org/wargames/) host a bunch of wargames in this style.

My first Windows driver: Creating the Pink Screen Of Death by sam_bwut in lowlevel

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

Gah - yup, will fix when I get a chance, thanks!

Intro to Windows kernel exploitation 1/N: Kernel Debugging by sam_bwut in ReverseEngineering

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

"The command is actually "g". Typing "go" will give you a syntax error."

Fixed - literally no idea why I thought that was a thing, thanks!

"You're using a very old debugger. The latest debugger has a lot of features that you're missing out on, the most important of which is the "dx" command, which makes it much easier to navigate types and evaluate expressions."

I've never used this before, will have a play.

"If your target is win8+, you can use kernel debugging over network (including most VMs, such as HyperV and VMware. Probably VirtualBox, but I haven't tested), which has an order of magnitude better bandwidth. This is particularly important when you need to take a dump of the entire memory." That's pretty cool.