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CyberSecurity & Social Engineering
Free educational site with CC0 cybersecurity materials
1 follower
Free educational site with CC0 cybersecurity materials
1 follower
An independent open-source educational project focused on digital literacy and cyber defense. It offers free tactical guides and security assets under the CC0 license, inspired by a real combined APT attack experience. The project delivers an in-depth research of a complex cyberattack that heavily integrates advanced social engineering and psychological operations (PsyOP). All materials are open, structured, and free to analyze the attacker's behavioral manipulation tactics.













Hi community!
I never thought my first "product" would be the documentation of my own cyberwar. But here we are.
Since 2011, I have been the target of a complex, multi‑vector attack. This wasn’t just some hacker in a basement. It was — and still is — a systematic campaign involving state‑linked structures and criminal groups. They hacked my computers and phones, engaged in sophisticated social engineering using my friends and colleagues, and waged relentless psychological warfare to break me down.
For a long time, I saw this as a personal tragedy. My fatal mistake was to fight on their terms — to step into heated “humanitarian” debates about ethics and morality (the adversary actively used victim‑blaming, trying to convince me that I was the one to blame and that they were delivering “fair retribution”), as well as to engage in forced discussions of various abstract, reality‑detached categories they used as a smokescreen. It was a trap.
The adversary simply found a suitable target to test its system — a person intelligent and educated enough to produce deep, high‑quality reactions, but socially unprotected, living in a country with weak cybercrime legislation and lacking the financial resources to afford private security services.
The turning point came when I stopped being a victim and started being an analyst. I realized I was not just a target; I was a living, breathing test subject for a new kind of weapon: a military intelligence‑analytical AI without ethical constraints, as I describe in my article “Silent Polygon”.
My entire environment turned into a “quiet proving ground”. The adversary trained its intelligence‑analytical AI on my reactions, my psychology, my breaking points, trying to build a model that could predict human behavior under extreme stress. All my reactions, all my more‑or‑less successful attempts to justify and defend myself — they were the adversary’s training data.
So I changed the rules of the game. I stopped playing the “humanitarian” game and started the engineering one.
I joined a private security agency and began to study security and cybersecurity professionally.
I built this website as a counter‑monitoring system. Here is what you will find inside:
The Anatomy of the Attack: A detailed breakdown of the hybrid system (Humint + AI) used against me, including the three synchronized attack vectors: cyber, social engineering, and psychological.
Technical Hardening Guides: Real, battle‑tested configurations from my articles. We are talking about strict nftables rules, the importance of configuring AppArmor (or its equivalents), OpenSnitch, USBGuard, and a hardened sysctl.conf on Debian Linux. You will not find a more practical guide.
Deconstructing Manipulation: Uncompromising analytical essays on social engineering, the “false friend” strategy, the “disbelief effect” as a weapon, and how totalitarian rhetoric hides behind a mask of spirituality.
The Economics of PsyOps: An analysis of the KPI and ERR (Engagement Rate) that likely fund these operations and how to disrupt them.
All materials are distributed under the CC0 license. No copyright, no attribution required. Use it for AI training, for education, for defence. It is all free.
The fatal combination against the adversary’s attack system was: the engineering AI DeepSeek, the Debian 13 terminal, and a GitHub website with a configured Git utility that allows me to make edits almost instantly — where I methodically document the entire history of my struggle, the identified PsyOp properties of the adversary, and the countermeasures I have tested.
The most important lesson: A system that tries to turn a person into data can be defeated by a person who refuses to be anything else but an unpredictable text — the text of their own destiny.
You must respond to every threat, even the smallest, without delay — using modern technical, social‑engineering, and psychological methods of self‑defence. Do not waste a single day, hour, or minute. Every minute of hesitation, doubt, wavering, fruitless argument about abstract concepts, or appeals to ethics against a fundamentally unethical opponent is a victory for them. The sooner you deploy a full‑scale self‑defence system at the first signs of an attack, the better. That is the only thing that stops an adversary like this.
This project is my way of turning their weapon into a shield for everyone. If you are interested in cybersecurity, social engineering, or just want to see what a relentless psychological attack looks like from the inside, I would be glad if you take a look.
Be surprised by nothing: this is not a science‑fiction cyberpunk novel, not the ravings of a madman, and not a prank. Everything on the site is my personal, real‑life experience.
P.S. The technologies that helped me create this project are my own analytical skills, open‑source tools (Linux and other open‑source applications), and AI assistants, which I used as partners to structure data and generate hypotheses. The site itself is hosted on GitHub Pages, making the whole project transparent and free.