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There is one core difference. In regular open source projects, lack of layman accessibility is considered a bug.

For offensive security tools such as in OP’s post, it simply isn’t a consideration because the audience for these tools are not laymen, therefore they aren’t designed with laymen in mind.

In fact there’s something of an incentive to keep laymen out because people just hitting random buttons without serious consideration of what they are doing can land people in jail.

They’re designed with the offensive security community in mind, of which even the most rookie members think nothing of firing up terminal and entering some nifty commands.

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1 point

I’m talking more open source in general and scraping tools aren’t ‘hacking’.

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2 points

Sherlock is an Open Source Intelligence (OSINT) tool. It is specifically made to gather information on a target, which is always step 1 of an attack.

We can agree to disagree on whether it constitutes an attack tool, however it is clearly made with red teamers in mind.

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1 point

So I guess ping is a hacking tool now too huh?

There isn’t a fuckdamn single drop of intellectual honesty in any of these comments.

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