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Wavestumbler v1.2.0
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Hits: 16 |
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Date added: 08/15/2005 |
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WaveStumbler is console based 802.11 network mapper for Linux and supports WEP, ESSID, MAC and more. This package includes a kernel patch (for the wireless nic drivers) which can be applied to the linux-2.4.17 sources and a program called wavestumbler. The program interacts with the patched network drivers to map wireless networks.
-Changes:
New kernel patch + massive bugfixes! WEP, Noise and channel should now be displayed properly. Added time fields firstseen , lastseen , maxsignal . Added curses support. |
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AirTraf v1.1
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Hits: 28 |
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Date added: 08/25/2005 |
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AirTraf 1.0 is a wireless sniffer that can detect and determine exactly what is being transmitted over 802.11 wireless networks. This open-source program tracks and identifies legitimate and rogue access points, keeps performance statistics on a by-user and by-protocol basis, measures the signal strength of network components, and more. Developed as an open source program, AirTraf is available in a stand-alone Linux package. |
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AirSnarf
hot!
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Hits: 57 |
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Date added: 08/25/2005 |
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Airsnarf is a simple rogue wireless access point setup utility designed to demonstrate how a rogue AP can steal usernames and passwords from public wireless hotspots. Airsnarf was developed and released to demonstrate an inherent vulnerability of public 802.11b hotspots--snarfing usernames and passwords by confusing users with DNS and HTTP redirects from a competing AP.
Install run Airsnarf with the following commands:
tar zxvf airsnarf-0.2.tar.gz
cd ./airsnarf-0.2
./airsnarf |
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APHunter
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Hits: 30 |
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Date added: 08/28/2005 |
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Access Point Hunter. It can find and automatically connect to whatever wireless network is within range. It can be used for site surveys, writing the results in a file. |
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Asleap
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Hits: 39 |
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Date added: 08/28/2005 |
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Recovers weak LEAP passwords. Can read live from any wireless interface in RFMON mode. Can monitor a single channel, or perform channel hopping to look for targets. This tool is released as a proof-of-concept to demonstrate a weakness in the LEAP protocol. LEAP is the Lightweight Extensible Authentication Protocol, intellectual property of Cisco Systems, Inc. LEAP is a security mechanism available only on Cisco access points to perform authentication of end-users and access points. LEAP is written as a standard EAP-type, but is not compliant with the 802.1X specification since the access point modifies packets in transit, instead of simply passing them to a authentication server (e.g. RADIUS). |
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