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atan
atan

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CTF for Beginners What is CTF and how to get started!

CTFs are one of my favorite hobbies. I love the feeling of solving a particularly difficult task and seeing all the puzzle pieces click together. I'd like this post to serve as an introduction to CTF for those in the dev.to community that may not know what it is.

So what is CTF?

CTF (Capture The Flag) is a kind of information security competition that challenges contestants to solve a variety of tasks ranging from a scavenger hunt on wikipedia to basic programming exercises, to hacking your way into a server to steal data. In these challenges, the contestant is usually asked to find a specific piece of text that may be hidden on the server or behind a webpage. This goal is called the flag, hence the name!

Like many competitions, the skill level for CTFs varies between the events. Some are targeted towards professionals with experience operating on cyber security teams. These typically offer a large cash reward and can be held at a specific physical location. Other events target the high school and college student range, sometimes offering monetary support for education to those that place highly in the competition!

CTFtime details the different types of CTF. To summarize, Jeopardy style CTFs provide a list of challenges and award points to individuals or teams that complete the challenges, groups with the most points wins. Attack/Defense style CTFs focus on either attacking an opponent's servers or defending one's own. These CTFs are typically aimed at those with more experience and are conducted at a specific physical location.

CTFs can be played as an individual or in teams so feel free to get your friends onboard!

I'd like to stress that CTFs are available to everyone. Many challenges do not require programming knowledge and are simply a matter of problem solving and creative thinking.

Challenge types

Jeopardy style CTFs challenges are typically divided into categories. I'll try to briefly cover the common ones.

  • Cryptography - Typically involves decrypting or encrypting a piece of data
  • Steganography - Tasked with finding information hidden in files or images
  • Binary - Reverse engineering or exploiting a binary file
  • Web - Exploiting web pages to find the flag
  • Pwn - Exploiting a server to find the flag

Where do I start?

If I managed to pique your curiosity, I've compiled a list of resources that helped me get started learning. CTF veterans, feel free to add your own resources in the comments below!

Learning

Resources

Tools (That I use often)

  • binwalk - Analyze and extract files
  • burp suite - Feature packed web penetration testing framework
  • stegsolve - Pass various filters over images to look for hidden text
  • GDB - Binary debugger
  • The command line :)

Practice

Many of the "official" CTFs hosted by universities and companies are time-limited competitions. There are many CTFs however that are online 24/7 that can be used as practice and learning tools. Here are some that I found to be friendly for beginners.

Conclusion

CTF is a great hobby for those interested in problem-solving and/or cyber security. The community is always welcoming and it can be a lot of fun tackling challenges with friends. This is my first post, if I was able to spark interest with even a single person, I'd consider it a success 😊. Thank you for reading!

Top comments (17)

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boris profile image
Boris Quiroz

Hello! Just to mention that seems to be a typo in https://cftime.org - CTF event tracker. (Missing t between c and f?) :)

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atan profile image
atan

Sheesh that typo has been there for way too long! Thanks for checking out this ancient post!

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progressiveprogrammer profile image
Aman Jaswal

loved the info. It's been months since I have been looking for resources to start with security and then I find this.. It's like a ray of hope for something I want to learn. Please don't mind if I bug you with more questions !! ;-)

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ochirgarid profile image
Ochirgarid Chinzorig

Thank you, The sources are wonderful, I think adding some video tutorials to the list like "LiveOverflow" channel on Youtube

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so2ja1 profile image
ASM💡📚.

thank so much 😊

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mvisaya profile image
mvisaya

Thank you @atan, this was very clear and informative. I appreciate you also linking to other resources :)

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lambdamamba profile image
Lena

Thank you for this blog post. This inspired me to publish write-ups of CTFs on dev.to! So far I've published some write-ups of CTFs, and I plan to publish more in the future!

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francomelandri profile image
Franco Melandri

First time I ever heard about CTF, thanks for the tiny description.
My curiosuity was born from here:
google.github.io/kctf/

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hapydox profile image
HapyDox

It's very useful for me <3

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batchuharish profile image
batchuharish

Thank you so much.

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saktipong profile image
saktipong

Thank so much.

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