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Source channel @githubtrending · Post #15013 · Jul 31

#other#bluetooth#bt#coding#cybersecurity#diy#electronics#esp32#flashing#hacker#hacking#jammer#nrf24#programming The ESP32-BlueJammer is a device that disrupts all wireless signals operating on the 2.4 GHz frequency, including Bluetooth, BLE, WiFi, RC drones, and many smart gadgets. It uses an ESP32 chip combined with nRF24 modules to create noise and send unnecessary packets, effectively jamming these signals within a range of over 30 meters, which can be extended with better antennas or amplifiers. This jammer is intended strictly for educational and security testing purposes to help understand and improve wireless security. It is illegal to use for malicious purposes, so it should be handled responsibly and legally[1][2][3]. https://github.com/EmenstaNougat/ESP32-BlueJammer

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@githubtrending · Post #15601 · 04/05/2026, 11:30 AM

#yara#awesome_list#blueteam#blueteam_tools#cti#detection#detection_engineering#dfir#hacktools#incident_response#ioc#iocs#ir#ransomware#redteam#rmm#security#siem#soc#threat_hunting#threat_intelligence You can access comprehensive security detection lists and threat hunting resources that help identify malicious activity across your infrastructure. These curated collections include indicators like suspicious file hashes, domain names, IP addresses, and behavioral patterns organized by threat type—from ransomware and phishing to command-and-control servers and vulnerable drivers. By integrating these lists into your security tools like SIEM platforms and endpoint detection systems, you gain immediate visibility into known threats while learning detection methodologies through guides and YARA rules. This accelerates your ability to hunt for compromises, validate security controls, and stay current with emerging attack techniques without building detection logic from scratch. https://github.com/mthcht/awesome-lists