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Brad Campbell hackersoup

  • Offensive Security Software Specialist at INGRESSIVE
  • Lorton, VA
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@rtt
rtt / tinder-api-documentation.md
Last active June 21, 2024 04:19
Tinder API Documentation

Tinder API documentation

Note: this was written in April/May 2014 and the API may has definitely changed since. I have nothing to do with Tinder, nor its API, and I do not offer any support for anything you may build on top of this. Proceed with caution

http://rsty.org/

I've sniffed most of the Tinder API to see how it works. You can use this to create bots (etc) very trivially. Some example python bot code is here -> https://gist.github.com/rtt/5a2e0cfa638c938cca59 (horribly quick and dirty, you've been warned!)

@dvliman
dvliman / gist:267b66ac3a321172fd35
Created January 4, 2015 03:32
linux-kernel-booting-process

GNU/Linux kernel internals

Linux kernel booting process. Part 1.

If you read my previous blog posts, you can note that sometime ago I have started to get involved low-level programming. I wrote some posts about x86_64 assembly programming for Linux. In the same time I started to dive into GNU/Linux kernel source code. It is very interesting for me to understand how low-level things works, how programs runs on my computer, how they located in memory, how kernel manages processes and memory, how network stack works on low-level and many many other things. I decided to write yet another series of posts about GNU/Linux kernel for x86_64.

Note, that I'm not professional kernel hacker and I don't write code for kernel at work, just a hobby. I just like low-level stuff and it is interesting to me how these