Created by co-hosts Darren Kitchen, Wess Tobler and Alanna Buehring in 2005, Hak.5 is a television show for geeks, hackers, and do-it-yourselfers distributed online. Inspired by former TechTV’s The Screen Savers (1998-2005), Hak.5 started out as an underground attempt to bring back tech entertainment. Within its first few months “on air” the show had become a hit among tech enthusiasts while mainstream media had begun to notice the booming Internet television world. Since then Hak.5 has appeared on G4TechTV’s Call for Help with Leo Laporte and Torrent with Amber MacArthur, as well as in Wired Magazine, PC Format Magazine, the Computer America Radio show, the TWiT podcast, and even Adventures of Superman. Despite this Hak.5 remains independent from a studio or channel sponsor to this day. The show is produced out of pocket from the co-hosts’ home built studio, each episode pushing for ever higher quality. While the cast and crew are not formally television trained they have enormous geek ambition.
Today on HakTip I will be focusing on some Linux Terminal commands that'll help you manipulate and move files.
This time on the show, using One-Time-Passwords in Linux for SSH authentication. We cover the theory and set up our server with a Yubikey. Plus relaying without GatewayPorts, easily edit Known_Hosts, Free SSHFS in Windows and a ton more!
This time on the show, local and remote forwarding with SSH, persistent connections in Linux with AutoSSH, Windows tunnels that don't quit (with a GUI front-end for Plink), and a whole lot of technolust. All that and more, this time on Hak5!
Today on HakTip I will be focusing on some easy commands to get you started in the Linux Terminal.
Traversing NAT firewalls couldn't be easier with a well crafted SSH proxy. This week Darren and Shannon break down reverse shells and persistence using a WiFi Pineapple and some autossh-fu. Plus, SSHFS GUIs for Linux, ClientAliveMaxCounts, Putty keys without Pageant and more!
Continuing with SOCKS5, SSH, Public Key Pairs and fingerprints, Darren and Shannon use SSH to create a secure remotely mounted network file system with implementations in both Windows and Linux.
Need a lightweight screen recorder for your Linux terminal sessions? Darren checks out ttyrec and ttyplay, this time on HakTip.
Continuing with Proxies, SOCKS5 and SSH, Darren and Shannon cover SSH Public Key Fingerprints, then build a free Windows SSH Server and configure Key Pairs for a Linux client.
Building on top of last week's episode on Proxies, SOCKS5 and SSH we're covering Authentication via Public Key Cryptography, setting up an SSH server in Linux and properly configuring a client in Windows.
Pimp your Gnome desktop with this First Person Shooter inspired terminal emulator.