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Ethical Password Cracking

Ethical Password Cracking

By : James Leyte-Vidal
4.4 (8)
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Ethical Password Cracking

Ethical Password Cracking

4.4 (8)
By: James Leyte-Vidal

Overview of this book

Whether you’re looking to crack passwords as part of a thorough security audit or aiming to recover vital information, this book will equip you with the skills to accomplish your goals. Written by a cybersecurity expert with over fifteen years of experience in penetration testing, Ethical Password Cracking offers a thorough understanding of password protection and the correct approach to retrieving password-protected data. As you progress through the chapters, you first familiarize yourself with how credentials are stored, delving briefly into the math behind password cracking. Then, the book will take you through various tools and techniques to help you recover desired passwords before focusing on common cracking use cases, hash recovery, and cracking. Real-life examples will prompt you to explore brute-force versus dictionary-based approaches and teach you how to apply them to various types of credential storage. By the end of this book, you'll understand how passwords are protected and how to crack the most common credential types with ease.
Table of Contents (17 chapters)
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1
Part 1: Introduction and Setup
6
Part 2: Collection and Cracking
13
Part 3: Conclusion

John and Hashcat Rules

As we have seen, John and hashcat can be used to perform various types of cracking attacks against credentials. However, brute-force style or mask attacks can be overly time-consuming, and wordlist-based (or dictionary) attacks may result in fewer cracked credentials when they are not present in the wordlist.

To try and move in between these two extremes, we can use rules, which are a way of taking a source list of candidates for cracking (such as a wordlist) and modifying those candidates to increase the likelihood of successful cracking. These modifications can be simple, such as capitalizing the first character of a candidate or adding a number to the end of a candidate. On the other hand, we can also engage in significant substitutions from the original candidate.

As an important note, all links and URLs are correct at the time of writing. Things can and do move about the internet at times – luckily, common code repositories such as GitHub have...

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