When I told Alex Kulagin, one of Flipper Zero’s co-creators, about my experiences using his tool to make these kinds of mundane observations, he explained that this is exactly what the device is meant for. “We want to help you understand something deeply, explore how it works, and expl...
The Flipper Zero is a tool that's been in the news a lot recently, particularly in Canada where the current government proposed to ban it. It's essentially a swiss army knife of penetration testing and hacking, but much of what it can do was already possible through other tools. The Fli...
At the core of phishing attacks, regardless of the technology or the particular target, is deception. While many in the information security sector might raise an eyebrow when it comes to the lack of sophistication of some phishing campaigns, it's easy to forget that there are billions of int...
The intended use of Flipper Zero is to give non-hackers and people without a lot of technical IT skills the ability to listen in on the signals around them. All kinds of devices around us are emitting signals, and to most of us, this is a closed-off world that we can’t access. Fl...
Is Flipper Zero a serious security threat? Flipper Zero has potential to be a security threat in the wrong hands. However, it is not inherently dangerous. To engineer a security attack would take a fair amount of planning and intent. Flipper Zero is better suited to lightpen testing act...
Flipper Zero: What it is, how you can use it The Flipper Zero is a swiss army knife of hacking tools, and it can do so much that you wouldn't expect. What was the Flipper One? A concept device running Kali Linux When the Flipper One was announced, it boasted a lot of feature...
At a mid-career level, everything is in plain sight. You have a track record. You probably know 1+ people in the institution or they might never give your application a second look. So as a known quantity, the question switches to how the person fits what is needed now and in the ...
Also:Flipper Zero: 'Can you really hack Wi-Fi networks?' and other questions answered On top of this, the low cost of phishing campaigns and the extremely low chances of scammers getting caught means they remain a very attractive option for fraudsters. ...