This commit focuses on terminological consistency, including:
* Use consistent capitalization for abbreviations (OSInt -> OSINT).
* Consistently expand ambiguous phrases (OS -> operating system).
* Settle on standard names (Wi-Fi -> WiFi, etc.) where a mix was used.
* Expand acronyms in item titles when doing so shortens the description.
* Replace descriptions that merely expanded acronyms with actual text.
* Remove duplicate items that have more than one URL (Commix project).
* Do not Title Case description text when description is simply prose.
This commit tidies some minor issues with pull request #141, namely:
* fix style guide compliance from accidental reversion during merge.
* add a period to the last sentence of the introduction paragraph.
* make the table of contents's content match the headings in the doc.
* consistently spell open source without a dashed word ("open-source").
This commit is a first-pass attempt at adhering to the style guide of
the Awesome List contribution guidelines at
https://github.com/sindresorhus/awesome/blob/master/pull_request_template.md
Specificaly, I have:
* added a succinct description of the project/theme at top of README.
* added the awesome badge on the right side of the list heading.
* titled the table of contents `Contents`.
* moved the `CONTRIBUTING.md` file to the expected filesystem path.
* capitalized the first word of link descriptions, when present.
* added trailing periods to link descriptions, when not present.
* removed the "A" and "An" prepositions from link descriptions.
* removed the Travis CI build status badge.
* matched the heading levels to the style guide's recommendations.
Cugu's `awesome-forensics` because it emphasizes free (gratis) and
open-source tools. It contains numerous tools that are relevant to
pentesting but not directly in scope, such as The Sleuth Kit, etc.
* New section OSINT Resources for link-sites rather than actual tools.
This commit adds a new subsection under "Online Resources" called "OSInt
Resources" and moves a few entries from the "OSInt Tools" section there.
This is done because the OSInt Tools section has grown to expand entries
that are not actually tools, but rather lists/collections of other
tools. These OSINT resources are great, but are distinct from a single,
installable, or otherwise immediately-usable tools.
This commit also adds a new such resource, NetBoomcamp.org's listing of
OSINT tools and custom Web interfaces for some endpoints, like Facebook.
* Fix link to `HackThisSite.org`. (Should be `https://hackthissite.org/`.)