Hi,
The media is saying that Google released their tsunami-security-scanner tool in github.
https://www.zdnet.com/article/google-open-sources-tsunami-vulnerability-scanner/
Google open-sources Tsunami vulnerability scanner
Google says Tsunami is an extensible network scanner for detecting high-severity vulnerabilities with as little false-positives as possible.
https://securityaffairs.co/wordpress/105686/hacking/google-tsunami-open-source.html
https://github.com/google/tsunami-security-scanner
Is somebody willing to make an openSUSE package? :-)
On Sat, 11 Jul 2020 13:35:48 +0200 "Carlos E. R." robin.listas@telefonica.net wrote:
Hi,
The media is saying that Google released their tsunami-security-scanner tool in github.
https://www.zdnet.com/article/google-open-sources-tsunami-vulnerability-scanner/
Google open-sources Tsunami vulnerability scanner
Google says Tsunami is an extensible network scanner for detecting high-severity vulnerabilities with as little false-positives as possible.
also:
"Google has open-sourced a vulnerability scanner for large-scale enterprise networks consisting of thousands or even millions of internet-connected systems.
"There are already hundreds of other commercial or open-sourced vulnerability scanners on the market, but what's different about Tsunami is that Google built the scanner with mammoth-sized companies like itself in mind."
Is somebody willing to make an openSUSE package? :-)
So I'm not sure why anybody would want it on Leap? On SUSE maybe?
Plus given that its initial action is a modified nmap scan, you would need to check the legality of running it in each jurisdiction, so I suppose it couldn't be hosted in a normal repo.
On 11/07/2020 14.02, Dave Howorth wrote:
On Sat, 11 Jul 2020 13:35:48 +0200 "Carlos E. R." <> wrote:
Is somebody willing to make an openSUSE package? :-)
So I'm not sure why anybody would want it on Leap? On SUSE maybe?
Plus given that its initial action is a modified nmap scan, you would need to check the legality of running it in each jurisdiction, so I suppose it couldn't be hosted in a normal repo.
We have nmap already.