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Welcome to HackOps.wiki
Offensive security knowledge. Structured, open, and alive.
π New to hacking? Start with the Introduction to Hacking guide.
Note: HackOps.wiki focuses exclusively on digital hacking within the context of ethical and offensive cybersecurity. This includes topics such as penetration testing, privilege escalation, red teaming, and CTF-style learning.
This wiki does not cover:
- Physical hacking (e.g. lockpicking)
- Psychological manipulation
- Life hacks or productivity tricks
- Any illegal or unauthorized activity
All content is intended for educational and ethical use in controlled environments.
π Start Exploring
Explore the core topics of offensive security through structured categories. Each topic contains subcategories with related tools, methods, and use cases.
π Categories
Section | Description | Entry Point |
---|---|---|
Reconnaissance | Enumeration, subdomain scanning, passive & active recon | Reconnaissance |
Privilege Escalation | Linux/Windows escalation, SUID, Sudo, LPE tricks | Privilege Escalation |
Web Exploitation | XSS, LFI, SSRF, SQLi, deserialization, auth bypasses | Web Exploitation |
Payloads | Reverse shells, one-liners, EDR bypasses, command injection | Payloads |
Red Team Tactics | C2 infrastructure, OPSEC, phishing simulation, evasion | Red Team Tactics |
OSINT | Open Source Intelligence, person tracing, metadata mining | OSINT |
CTF Walkthroughs | TryHackMe, Hack The Box, VulnHub, custom labs | CTF Walkthroughs |
π§ Contribute
- How to Contribute β editing guide and structure
- Sandbox β try out wiki editing here
- Style Guide β maintain clarity and consistency
Have something valuable to share? HackOps.wiki is open for contribution. Make your edits count.
π Meta
HackOps.wiki is a living archive of offensive security techniques.
For educational and ethical simulation purposes only.