The ADHD-HTB playbook: hacking the brain that hacks the box
Ten friction-bypassing study methods for grinding HackTheBox with an ADHD brain, plus the two of them I turned into real tools: a Swipe-to-Pwn Anki deck and an htb-operator shell.
How things break: exploitation, red teaming, the attacker's craft.
Ten friction-bypassing study methods for grinding HackTheBox with an ADHD brain, plus the two of them I turned into real tools: a Swipe-to-Pwn Anki deck and an htb-operator shell.
Imposter syndrome in security isn't a character flaw; it's an accurate readout of an unbounded field, misfiled as a personal deficiency. The fix is a traversal strategy, not more knowledge.
Quantum computers will slice through today's internet locks like a laser through glass. Inside the race to build math even a future super-machine can't crack: public-key crypto, Shor's algorithm, and the diamond lock.
A running log of web challenges: patterns that repeat, traps I fell into, and the meta-skill CTFs are secretly teaching.
Attackers don't break rules; they discover that the rules compose differently than the designers believed.
Bridging theoretical biology and systems security in a way that isn't just a superficial metaphor
A half-formed hunch: allocating research time across targets is a bankroll problem, and Kelly might be the right lens.
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