Social engineering succeeds because it targets people instead of code. Attackers skip firewalls and go straight to the person who can click a link, open an
Understanding Social Engineering: Why Humans Are the Weakest Link


Social engineering succeeds because it targets people instead of code. Attackers skip firewalls and go straight to the person who can click a link, open an

You already know how to run nmap and Metasploit. The next step is understanding why those commands produce results and what to do when they fail. That shif

Open source intelligence fills gaps that paid threat feeds and internal logs leave behind. Teams pull public records, social posts, domain registrations, a

You learn fast in this line of work that most breaches start with something small and overlooked. I sat down with a hacker who has spent two decades testin

You can land a cybersecurity role without a college degree if you focus on skills that hiring managers actually test. Many teams now prioritize proof of ab

These tools form the core of most pentests. You run them on real engagements to map networks, find flaws, and verify access without paying for commercial l

The line sits at permission first, then intent and outcome. If you access a system without approval, you have already crossed it in most legal systems, eve

You can run a solid local security meetup or conference with a small team and a clear plan. Focus on one room, three to six speakers, and a single day firs