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  Snort
Posted by: Anonymous - 03-14-2025, 02:39 AM - Forum: Kali Linux - No Replies

Snort
Want real-time traffic analysis and packet logging capability? Snort has got your back. Even being an open source intrusion prevention system, it has a lot to offer.
The official website mentions the procedure to get it installed if you don’t have it already.

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  John the Ripper
Posted by: Anonymous - 03-14-2025, 02:38 AM - Forum: Kali Linux - No Replies

John the Ripper
[Image: john-the-ripper-jpg.jpg]
John the Ripper is a popular password cracker tool available on Kali Linux. It’s free and open source as well. But, if you are not interested in the community-enhanced version, you can choose the pro version for commercial use.

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  sqlmap
Posted by: Anonymous - 03-14-2025, 02:36 AM - Forum: Kali Linux - No Replies

sqlmap
[Image: sqlmap-800x528-jpg.jpg]
If you were looking for an open source penetration testing tool – sqlmap is one of the best. It automates the process of exploiting SQL injection flaws and helps you take over database servers.

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  Apktool
Posted by: Anonymous - 03-14-2025, 02:35 AM - Forum: Kali Linux - No Replies

Apktool
[Image: apktool-800x504-jpg.jpg]
Apktool is indeed one of the popular tools found on Kali Linux for reverse engineering Android apps. Of course, you should make good use of it – for educational purposes.
With this tool, you can experiment some stuff yourself and let the original developer know about your idea as well. What do you think you’ll be using it for?

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  BeEF
Posted by: Anonymous - 03-14-2025, 02:32 AM - Forum: Kali Linux - No Replies

BeEF
[Image: beef-framework-800x339-jpg.jpg]
BeEF (Browser Exploitation Framework) is yet another impressive tool. It has been tailored for penetration testers to assess the security of a web browser.
This is one of the best Kali Linux tools because a lot of users do want to know and fix the client-side problems when talking about web security.

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  Burp Suite Scanner
Posted by: Anonymous - 03-14-2025, 02:30 AM - Forum: Kali Linux - No Replies

Burp Suite Scanner

[Image: burp-suite-community-edition-800x582-jpg.jpg]

Burp Suite Scanner is a fantastic web security analysis tool. Unlike other web application security scanner, Burp offers a GUI and quite a few advanced tools.
However, the community edition restricts the features to only some essential manual tools. For professionals, you will have to consider upgrading. Similar to the previous tool, this isn’t open source either.
I’ve used the free version, but if you want more details on it, you should check out the features available on their official website.

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  Trump Has Begun Another Trade War. Here’s a Timeline of How We Got Here
Posted by: Anonymous - 03-10-2025, 08:53 PM - Forum: Politics - No Replies

Trump Has Begun Another Trade War. Here’s a Timeline of How We Got Here

[Image: trump-dee664-webp.webp]

NEW YORK — Long-threatened tariffs from U.S. President Donald Trump have plunged the country into a trade war abroad — all while on-again, off-again new levies continue to escalate uncertainty.

Since taking office less than two months ago, Trump has rolled out hefty import taxes on goods coming from America's three biggest trading partners — Mexico, Canada and China — and promises that more targets are on the horizon.
Trump is no stranger to tariffs. He also launched a trade war during his first term in office, but has more sweeping plans now. Economists stress there could greater consequences on businesses and economies worldwide this time — and that higher prices will likely leave consumers footing the bill.

There's also been a sense of whiplash from Trump's back-and-forth tariff threats and responding retaliation, including recently-postponed levies for some goods from Canada and Mexico that followed a 30-day pause for the auto industry. The uncertainty has roiled financial markets, lowered consumer confidence, and enveloped many businesses with questions that could delay hiring and investment.
Here's a timeline of how we got here:

Trump's first term
Trump launches a trade war during his first term in office — taking particular aim at China.
The two countries exchange a series of tit-for-tat levies affecting hundreds of billions of dollars’ worth of goods. The dispute centers around U.S. allegations that China deploys underhanded tactics — including stealing trade secrets and pressuring U.S. companies to hand over sensitive technology — in an effort to supplant the U.S. in advanced fields such as quantum computing and automated cars.

Trump puts tariffs on most Chinese goods. Meanwhile, Beijing responds with its own retaliatory tariffs on U.S. products ranging from fruit, soybeans and wine to aircraft, automotive and chemical imports.
Separately, Trump slaps tariffs on imported solar panels and washing machines. And in 2018, he imposes taxes of 25% on imported steel and 10% on aluminum imports on national security grounds, escalating tensions with other trading partners. He also uses the threat of more tariffs to force Canada and Mexico to renegotiate a North American trade pact, called the U.S.-Mexico-Canada Agreement, in 2020.

Read More: The Major U.S. Companies Scaling Back DEI Efforts as Trump Targets Initiatives

Tariffs under Biden
President Joe Biden largely preserves most of the tariffs Trump previously enacted against China, but his administration claims to take a more targeted approach.
In October 2022, he issues sweeping new restrictions on selling semiconductors and chipmaking equipment to China. These curbs will be expanded in October 2023 and December 2024 — when China responds with a ban of U.S. exports for various high-tech materials like gallium and germanium.

Biden also hikes tariffs on Chinese electric vehicles, solar cells, steel, aluminum and medical equipment in May 2024. And in July, he imposes tariffs on steel and aluminum shipped from Mexico but made elsewhere in an attempt to stop China from circumventing import taxes.
2024 campaign trail promises
Biden's 2024 tariff moves come in the middle of a heated presidential campaign — with both Biden and Trump taking jabs at each other in attempts to show who's tougher on China.
On the campaign trail, Trump says that he plans to impose tariffs of at least 60% on all Chinese imports if he wins a second term. He also floats the idea of a tariff of up to 20% on everything else the U.S. imports while threatening to impose even bigger levies for specific countries or manufacturers that take their business outside the U.S.
While the Biden-Harris administration uses tariffs to target China, both Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris — who becomes the Democratic nominee after Biden drops out of the race — maintain that Trump’s promise of more broad tariffs worldwide would be a mistake. Harris labels Trump's call for tariffs as a “national sales tax” — with her campaign later saying that a 20% tariff applied across the board would raise expenses for a typical family by almost $4,000 annually.

November 2024
Trump wins the U.S. presidential election. He continues to promise steep tariff hikes in the coming weeks and months leading up to his first day back in office.

January 20
Trump is sworn in. In his inaugural address, he again promises to “tariff and tax foreign countries to enrich our citizens." And he reiterates plans to create an agency called the External Revenue Service, which has yet to be established.
On his first day in office, Trump also says he expects to put 25% tariffs on Canada and Mexico starting on Feb. 1, while declining to immediately flesh out plans for taxing Chinese imports.

Read More: What Are Tariffs and Why Is Trump In Favor of Them?

January 26
Trump threatens 25% tariffs on all Colombia imports and other retaliatory measures after President Gustavo Petro’s rejects two U.S. military aircraft carrying migrants to the country, accusing Trump of not treating immigrants with dignity during deportation.

In response, Petro also announces a retaliatory 25% increase in Colombian tariffs on U.S. goods. But Colombia later reversed its decision and accepted the flights carrying migrants. The two countries soon signaled a halt in the trade dispute.

February 1
Trump signs an executive order to impose tariffs on imports from Mexico, Canada and China — 10% on all imports from China and 25% on imports from Mexico and Canada starting Feb. 4. Trump invoked this power by declaring a national emergency — ostensibly over undocumented immigration and drug trafficking. The levies on Canada and Mexico threaten to blow up Trump’s own USMCA trade deal, which allowed many products to cross North American borders duty free.
The action prompts swift outrage from all three countries, with promises of retaliatory measures.

February 3
Trump agrees to a 30-day pause on his tariff threats against Mexico and Canada, with both trading partners taking steps to appease Trump's concerns about border security and drug trafficking.

February 4
Trump's new 10% tariffs on all Chinese imports to the U.S. still go into effect. China retaliates the same day by announcing a flurry of countermeasures, including sweeping new duties on a variety of American goods and an anti-monopoly investigation into Google.
China's 15% tariffs on coal and liquefied natural gas products, and a 10% levy on crude oil, agricultural machinery and large-engine cars imported from the U.S., take effect Feb. 10.

February 10
Trump announces plans to hike steel and aluminum tariffs. He removes the exemptions from his 2018 tariffs on steel, meaning that all steel imports will be taxed at a minimum of 25%, and also raises his 2018 aluminum tariffs to 25% from 10% set to go into effect March 12.

February 13
Trump announces a plan for “reciprocal” tariffs — promising to increase U.S. tariffs to match the tax rates that other countries charge on imports “for purposes of fairness.” Economists warn that the reciprocal tariffs, set to overturn decades of trade policy, could create chaos for global businesses.

Beyond China, Canada and Mexico, he indicates that additional countries, such as India, won’t be spared from higher tariffs. And in the following weeks, Trump suggests that European countries could face a 25% levy as part of these efforts.

February 25
Trump signed an executive order instructing the Commerce Department to consider whether a tariff on imported copper is needed to protect national security. He cites the material's use in U.S. defense, infrastructure and emerging technologies.

Read More: What Are Reciprocal Tariffs and Who Might Be Impacted by Trump’s Plan?

March 1
Trump signs an additional executive order instructing the Commerce Department to consider whether tariffs on lumber and timber are also needed to protect national security, arguing that the construction industry and military depend on a strong supply of wooden products in the U.S.

March 4
Trump’s 25% tariffs on imports from Canada and Mexico go into effect, though he limits the levy to 10% on Canadian energy. He also doubles the tariff on all Chinese imports to 20%.

All three countries promise retaliatory measures. Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau announces tariffs on more than $100 billion of American goods over the course of 21 days. And Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum says her country would respond with its own retaliatory tariffs on U.S. goods without specifying the targeted products immediately, signaling hopes to de-escalate.
China, meanwhile, imposes tariffs of up to 15% on a wide array of key U.S. farm exports. It also expands the number of U.S. companies subject to export controls and other restrictions by about two dozen.

March 5
Trump grants a one-month exemption on his new tariffs impacting goods from Mexico and Canada for U.S. automakers. The pause arrives after the president spoke with leaders of the “Big 3” automakers — Ford, General Motors and Stellantis.

March 6
In a wider extension, Trump postpones 25% tariffs on many imports from Mexico and some imports from Canada for a month. But he still plans to impose “reciprocal” tariffs starting on April 2.

Trump credited Sheinbaum with making progress on border security and drug smuggling as a reason for again pausing tariffs — and the Mexican president said in a post on X that she and Trump “had an excellent and respectful call in which we agreed that our work and collaboration have yielded unprecedented results.”

Trump’s actions also thawed relations with Canada somewhat, although outrage and uncertainty over the trade war remains. Still, after its initial retaliatory tariffs of $30 billion Canadian (US$21 billion) on U.S. goods, the government said it had suspended its second wave of retaliatory tariffs worth $125 billion Canadian (US$87 billion).

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  Tariffs Canada faces now: Keep up with the latest developments in Trump's trade war
Posted by: Anonymous - 03-10-2025, 07:47 PM - Forum: Politics - No Replies

Tariffs Canada faces now: Keep up with the latest developments in Trump's trade war

[Image: AA1-ACv-PG-jpg.jpg]
United States President Donald Trump ’s tariff war has become a complicated roller coaster of international trade disputes.
Every day there seems to be a new announcement of tariffs threatened, imposed or pulled back . The Financial Post will keep you up to date on the latest developments here.

Click here to go straight to today’s tariff news.

What’s happening today:

What tariffs are coming?
  • March 12: United States to impose 25 per cent tariffs on all steel and aluminum imports.

  • March 20: China to impose 100 per cent retaliatory tariffs on Canadian canola oil, while pork and seafood will face a 25 per-cent levy. The tariffs are push-back against Canada for imposing a 100 per cent levy on electric cars from China and 25 per cent on steel and aluminum.

  • April 2: The United States to impose reciprocal tariffs on nations that have levies on U.S. goods. Trump said Friday he was considering imposing retaliatory tariffs on Canadian dairy and lumber as soon as this week, but U.S. Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick told NBC’s “Meet the Press” on Sunday that those tariffs will wait until April 2.

What tariffs have been delayed?

A White House official told reporters on Thursday that CUSMA covers about 38 per cent of Canadian imports and 50 per cent of those coming from Mexico.

The auto sector is included in the agreement, meaning auto tariffs will not be in effect for the month. Trump had previously announced a one-month reprieve for Stellantis NV, General Motors Corp. and Ford Motors Corp.
CUSMA protects almost all Canadian agriculture from tariffs, provided they have been declared as CUSMA compliant.

Which ones have not?

Canadian energy is not part of the CUSMA, meaning a reduced 10 per cent tariff will remain in place for the month.
Potash is also not included, though Trump temporarily reduced potash tariffs to 10 per cent.
Lutnick told NBC’s “Meet the Press” on Sunday that steel and aluminum imports will still face a 25 per cent tariff beginning on Wednesday.

Additionally, many Canadian exporters that would be considered CUSMA compliant haven’t gone through the process of being certified because they only face negligible tariffs until recently.

How has Canada responded?

Canada’s retaliatory tariffs on $30 billion worth of U.S. goods announced last week remain in place, though a second wave of duties due to come into effect within 21 days will be delayed until April 2, according to Finance Minister Dominic LeBlanc.
Incoming Prime Minister Mark Carney , who won the Liberal leadership race on Sunday, has pledged to keep Canada’s retaliatory tariffs in place.
Ontario Premier Doug Ford is imposing a 25 per cent surcharge on electricity exports to New York, Minnesota and Michigan.
The U.S. has issued a one-month delay on tariffs for products covered under the Canada-U.S.-Mexico Agreement (CUSMA) .

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  FULL SPEECH: Justin Trudeau gives final speech as Liberal Party leader
Posted by: Anonymous - 03-10-2025, 07:30 PM - Forum: Politics - No Replies

FULL SPEECH: Justin Trudeau gives final speech as Liberal Party leader

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  Lawrence: Canada's Trudeau humiliates 'cowardly' Trump who backs down on tariffs. Again.
Posted by: Anonymous - 03-09-2025, 04:24 AM - Forum: Politics - No Replies

Lawrence: Canada's Trudeau humiliates 'cowardly' Trump who backs down on tariffs. Again.

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