seen from United States
seen from United Kingdom
seen from Brazil
seen from Russia
seen from United States
seen from China

seen from Australia

seen from Japan
seen from Malaysia
seen from United States
seen from Norway

seen from Romania
seen from Yemen
seen from Spain
seen from Canada
seen from China
seen from India
seen from India
seen from United Arab Emirates
seen from China
“Youth’s Tool Chest” made in Superior, Ohio around the turn of the century. It contains a saw, a plane, mallet, mammer, square, ruler, and an awl.
Toy tools!
One ($32.19) - Two ($26.78) - Three ($20.49)
Four ($18.86) - Five ($19.99) - Six ($11.94)
Seven ($13.59) - Eight ($12.68) - Nine ($26.91)
Sunday Round up: 17th of April 2016
Sunday Round up for the week ending in the 17th of April 2016:
Articles:
v0lt - Security CTF Toy Tools: http://www.kitploit.com/2016/04/v0lt-security-ctf-toy-tools.html
New Threat Can Auto-Brick Apple Devices: http://krebsonsecurity.com/2016/04/new-threat-can-auto-brick-apple-devices/
Ovidentia troubleticketsModule 7.6 - Remote File Inclusion: https://www.exploit-db.com/exploits/39688/
IPGeoLocation – Retrieve IP Geolocation Information: http://www.darknet.org.uk/2016/04/ipgeolocation-retrieve-ip-geolocation-information/
Linux/x86_64 - Read /etc/passwd - 65 bytes: https://www.exploit-db.com/exploits/39700/
Facebook:
Also I'm now on Facebook thanks to IFTTT check me out here and like my page for the latest updates!
Twitter:
"INURLBR – Advanced Search Engine Tool" #infosec #feedly https://t.co/kS30yA3uaP
— The Security Sleuth (@Security_Sleuth) April 11, 2016
"How to not get pwned on Windows: Don't run any virtual machines, open any web pages ..." #infosec #feedly https://t.co/IIvIns9nNe
— The Security Sleuth (@Security_Sleuth) April 12, 2016
"USB-C adds authentication protocol" #infosec #feedly https://t.co/GeRl9OYkwm
— The Security Sleuth (@Security_Sleuth) April 13, 2016
"You won't believe this, but… nothing useful found on Farook iPhone" #infosec #feedly https://t.co/qCjQHtYM2t
— The Security Sleuth (@Security_Sleuth) April 14, 2016
"Man accidentally 'deletes his entire company' with one line of bad code" #programming #feedly https://t.co/BTlKrcTKVs
— The Security Sleuth (@Security_Sleuth) April 14, 2016
Read last weeks round up here
If you found some other interesting stuff this week feel free to leave a link to it in the comments section.