Stealing The Network (novel) free ebook
If you haven't read it before, someone kindly posted Stealing The Network series of novels online as a PDF. http://www.lyraphase.com/doc/security/Stealing%20the%20Network/Stealing%20the%20Network%20-%20The%20Complete%20Series%20Collector's%20Edition.pdf "Stealing the Network: How to Own the Box is a unique book in the fiction department. It combines stories that are false, with technology that is real. While none of the stories have happened, there is no reason why they could not. You could argue it provides a road map for criminal hackers, but I say it does something else; it provides a glimpse into the creative minds of some of today's best hackers, and even the best hackers will tell you that the game is a mental one." - from the foreword by Jeff Moss, President & CEO, BlackHat, Inc. *Stealing the Network* is a book of science fiction. It's a series of short stories about characters who gain unauthorized access to equipment and information, or deny use of those resources to the people who are meant to have access to them. The characters, though sometimes well described, are not the stars of these stories. That honor belongs to the tools that the black-hat hackers use in their attacks, and also to the defensive measures arrayed against them by the hapless sysadmins who, in this volume, always lose. Consider this book, with its plentiful detail, the answer to every pretty but functionally half-baked user interface ever shown in a feature film. One can read this book for entertainment, though its writing falls well short of cyberpunk classics like *Burning Chrome <http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0060539828/$%7B0%7D>* and *Snow Crash <http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0553380958/$%7B0%7D>*. Its value is in its explicit references to current technologies--Cisco routers, OpenSSH, Windows 2000--and specific techniques for hacking them (the heroes and heroines of this book are always generous with command-history dumps). The specific detail may open your eyes to weaknesses in your own systems (or give you some ideas for, ahem, looking around on the network). Alternately, you can just enjoy the extra realism that the detail adds to these stories of packetized adventure. *--David Wall* The stories of the Stealing the Network series entertain in the same way that "war stories" from fellow hackers and security professionals often keeps a more intimate audience's interest: by mixing intriguing situations with juicy technical detail that can serve as a useful take-away. No one will accuse these books of containing fine literature, but that's not really the point. The stories are well written enough to keep you wanting to know what will happen next, while the technical information is as accurate as you're likely to see in fiction. Segments involving hacking are written and illustrated with enough attention to detail and length to serve as introductory educational tutorials for the topics (including web application hacking, reverse engineering, and wireless security). Most of these scenarios are believable as parts of larger-scale operations. --McGrew on Amazon <http://www.amazon.com/review/R1Z4P33XFA3MWL/ref=cm_cr_dp_title?ie=UTF8&ASIN=B002ZFXTZ6&channel=detail-glance&nodeID=133140011&store=digital-text>
The United States of Air is a satire that makes fun of mass surveillance and the NSA. CC-licensed, so free to share. Free audiobook too. XHTML on GitHub, run it through calibre for an epub or mobi: https://github.com/toholdaquill/united-states-of-air free audiobook here: http://podiobooks.com/title/the-united-states-of-air-a-satire/ ... The National Sewer Agency is spying on people's toilets, looking for food terrorists... Food Enforcement Agent Jason Frolick believes in America. He believes in eating air. He struggles to get the food monkey off his back. As part of the Global War on Fat, his job is to put food terrorists in Fat Camp. When a pizza dealer gets whacked in the park across the street from the Thin House, the Prophet Jones himself asks Frolick to investigate. For the first time ever, Frolick solves a murderbut what he finds out shakes his faith. Will he ever be able to eat air again?
On Sun, Nov 1, 2015 at 9:21 AM, J.M. Porup <jm@porup.com> wrote:
The United States of Air is a satire that makes fun of mass surveillance and the NSA.
Surveillance isn't funny. It takes legendary comedic talent to acknowledge that and drive it home, everything else are humor-ops attempting to pass it off as non-serious. Hundreds of channels, filled with ops. Where's the signal (beef)?
https://github.com/toholdaquill/united-states-of-air http://podiobooks.com/title/the-united-states-of-air-a-satire/
On Sun, Nov 01, 2015 at 02:41:11PM -0500, grarpamp wrote:
On Sun, Nov 1, 2015 at 9:21 AM, J.M. Porup <jm@porup.com> wrote:
The United States of Air is a satire that makes fun of mass surveillance and the NSA.
Surveillance isn't funny. It takes legendary comedic talent to acknowledge that and drive it home, everything else are humor-ops attempting to pass it off as non-serious. Hundreds of channels, filled with ops. Where's the signal (beef)?
I agree. Maybe read the book before you judge it? Jens
https://github.com/toholdaquill/united-states-of-air http://podiobooks.com/title/the-united-states-of-air-a-satire/
The Covert Comic, long online (covertcomic.com), suggests the need for an IC Comic, if for no other reason than to ridicule those who claim urgent need to castigate the IC, a noble consortium of 13 or more agencies of a classified number of dedicated secretkeepers working tirelessly to protect citizens of the United States of America from knowing what the IC and its ever growing number of overseers, contractors, universities, consultants, free-lancers and carefully coddled, groomed and briefed media reps like those exploiting Edward Snowden and the increasing gaggle of forever gagged whistleblowers and ex-spies, actually do, not just the glamorized spillage. Spying is funny, peculiar, odd, insane, vain, treacherous, vicious, all too human comedic. At 02:45 PM 11/1/2015, you wrote:
On Sun, Nov 01, 2015 at 02:41:11PM -0500, grarpamp wrote:
On Sun, Nov 1, 2015 at 9:21 AM, J.M. Porup <jm@porup.com> wrote:
The United States of Air is a satire that makes fun of mass surveillance and the NSA.
Surveillance isn't funny. It takes legendary comedic talent to acknowledge that and drive it home, everything else are humor-ops attempting to pass it off as non-serious. Hundreds of channels, filled with ops. Where's the signal (beef)?
I agree.
Maybe read the book before you judge it?
Jens
https://github.com/toholdaquill/united-states-of-air http://podiobooks.com/title/the-united-states-of-air-a-satire/
participants (4)
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grarpamp
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J.M. Porup
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John Young
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Michael Best