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Title: Honeynet's Forensics challenge Post by: dbest on March 26, 2012, 02:41:02 AM The 11th challenge in the series is out.
https://honeynet.org/node/829 Deadline is May 31st. I think I have the first question figured out, but the rest of the packet capture is beyond my comprehension. Title: Re: Honeynet's Forensics challenge Post by: lorddicranius on March 26, 2012, 05:22:02 PM Cool stuff, thanks for sharing! I've never heard of these challenges before. I like that they keep the old challenges up, I'm gonna work my way through those too!
Title: Re: Honeynet's Forensics challenge Post by: 3xban on March 27, 2012, 08:28:01 AM I saw this last week, site looked fun so certainly added it to the favorites. I was trying to dig down for some "easy" challenges to start on.
Title: Re: Honeynet's Forensics challenge Post by: sil on March 27, 2012, 10:20:39 AM L'autre Endroit Cellule ... All I'm saying ;)
Title: Re: Honeynet's Forensics challenge Post by: sil on March 27, 2012, 10:40:46 AM The 11th challenge in the series is out. https://honeynet.org/node/829 Deadline is May 31st. I think I have the first question figured out, but the rest of the packet capture is beyond my comprehension. Open up the capture in Wireshark, right click on the first packet and select Follow TCP stream. In the drop down, select the second option, (181875 bytes), save that as a file named "output" If you're on Linux, type: file output to find out what kind of file it is and go from there. Title: Re: Honeynet's Forensics challenge Post by: dbest on March 28, 2012, 12:14:45 PM The 11th challenge in the series is out. https://honeynet.org/node/829 Deadline is May 31st. I think I have the first question figured out, but the rest of the packet capture is beyond my comprehension. Thanks for the hint... time to investigate further. Oh and i loved the scan of the month challenges. :) Open up the capture in Wireshark, right click on the first packet and select Follow TCP stream. In the drop down, select the second option, (181875 bytes), save that as a file named "output" If you're on Linux, type: file output to find out what kind of file it is and go from there.
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