<description>When people ask me what my long-term plans are for Gophish, I’ve historically pointed them to the Github issues, saying that I usually work out of what’s there. It’s not a great answer, I know.
This year, I wanted to try something different. I have big plans for Gophish in 2019, and I’m excited to share some of them here.
Refactoring the Frontend When I started making Gophish, there really weren’t many mature Javascript frameworks around.</description>
<description>When I first talked about Gophish at BSides SATX nearly 3 years ago, I wanted to demonstrate how quick it was to get up and running. I asked the audience to time me as I did a live installation on a fresh server, which took exactly 30 seconds.
Not bad.
I’ve always wanted Gophish to be easy and quick to install. It’s an example of building empathy into security tools, since the people using Gophish likely don’t have time to work through a long installation process.</description>
<description>Gophish provides powerful template tags making it easy to create customized emails and landing pages. Sometimes, however, it can be difficult to remember the exact syntax and what template tags are supported.
I&rsquo;ve had multiple issues filed that are the result of incorrect tags being used. Generally, the crash looks something like this:
worker.go:90: template: html_template:6: function &quot;Name&quot; not defined panic: runtime error: invalid memory address or nil pointer dereference [recovered] panic: runtime error: invalid memory address or nil pointer dereference [signal 0xb code=0x1 addr=0x10 pc=0x61a4a5] The error from template suggests that a certain function, Name wasn’t defined.</description>
<description>When I first set out to build Gophish 5 years ago, I used it as an opportunity to learn Golang.
One of the things that makes Go so powerful is the batteries-included standard library, which makes it a breeze to write servers. In this post, we&rsquo;ll walk through how to build web servers, starting from a basic Hello World and ending with a web server that:
Uses Let&rsquo;s Encrypt for HTTPS Implements an API subrouter Implements middleware Serves static files Shuts down gracefully If you just want the final code, you can find it in my http-boilerplate repo on Github.</description>
<description>&ldquo;I got my database schema correct on the first try.&rdquo;
-No one ever.
Like most big projects, gophish needed a way to automatically manage changes to our database schema. As new features were being added, we found ourselves in a situation that required us to add or modify columns and tables to store the new data.
In a hosted environment, this is no problem since we control the database and can make schema changes as we see fit.</description>
The wait is over! The gophish team is excited to announce our first public beta version of gophish - version 0.1.1! This blog post will be a short introduction into what gophish is, as well as some of the insanely awesome features we&rsquo;ve created.
What is Gophish? Gophish is a phishing framework that makes the simulation of real-world phishing attacks dead-simple. The idea behind gophish is simple – make industry-grade phishing training available to everyone.</description>
<description>Hello World! This is the official blog for gophish, a phishing toolkit designed to make rock-solid security awareness training accessible to everyone.
Check back here often to find information on gophish updates, how to leverage gophish in interesting ways to test the security of your organization, as well as general tips and tricks on securing your email infrastructure.
The gophish team is excited to release the alpha version of gophish soon!</description>