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submitted 11 months ago by adzsx@infosec.pub to c/cybersecurity@infosec.pub

I am currently trying to learn cyber security, specifically pentesting. I also do blue team things now and then, but not too often. I've started about 2 years ago with programming in python, later golang. I feel like I am decent in both. However when it comes to pentesting and security in general. It doesn't feel like I'm doing progress whatsoever. I know about theoretical Linux, networking, programming and that stuff, but when it comes to the hands on tasks, I fail miserably. I know know how HTTP works, but can't do easy Hack the Box CTFs without a complete writeup (not just little hints). I solved a few CTFs on different platforms with the help of writeups because I thought I just lacked the creative thinking part, but I don't see any progress. And when I feel like doing CTFs, I quickly loose motivation because I don't get anything done. Can anyone relate? How can I overcome this?

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[-] cmg@infosec.pub 2 points 11 months ago

Read, reproduce, understand. Think of how the programmer was solving a problem and left a problem. Did they probably didn’t understand the problems. The synthetic challenges are often a skill to themselves.

Re attention span, consider different expectations. Professional product engagements are often 2 ftes/2 weeks. Getting a few good findings out in that time is the goal.

Sometimes they run out of time on a thread they are looking at. Sometimes they pull on a thread only to find out there’s no way from here. Sometimes years later there’s an insight that x could work.

Building up that last skill is what makes you more effective. Find someone to bounce ideas off of that’s in the learning curve with you.

this post was submitted on 26 Nov 2023
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