Book Image

Python Ethical Hacking from Scratch

By : Fahad Ali Sarwar
Book Image

Python Ethical Hacking from Scratch

By: Fahad Ali Sarwar

Overview of this book

Penetration testing enables you to evaluate the security or strength of a computer system, network, or web application that an attacker can exploit. With this book, you'll understand why Python is one of the fastest-growing programming languages for penetration testing. You'll find out how to harness the power of Python and pentesting to enhance your system security. Developers working with Python will be able to put their knowledge and experience to work with this practical guide. Complete with step-by-step explanations of essential concepts and practical examples, this book takes a hands-on approach to help you build your own pentesting tools for testing the security level of systems and networks. You'll learn how to develop your own ethical hacking tools using Python and explore hacking techniques to exploit vulnerabilities in networks and systems. Finally, you'll be able to get remote access to target systems and networks using the tools you develop and modify as per your own requirements. By the end of this ethical hacking book, you'll have developed the skills needed for building cybersecurity tools and learned how to secure your systems by thinking like a hacker.
Table of Contents (14 chapters)
1
Section 1: The Nuts and Bolts of Ethical Hacking – The Basics
4
Section 2: Thinking Like a Hacker – Network Information Gathering and Attacks
8
Section 3: Malware Development

Stealing passwords

In this section, we will see how we can steal Wi-Fi passwords stored on the victim PC. Note that we have already discussed how to execute commands on a Windows machine using our hacker program. We can take advantage of this program to retrieve Wi-Fi passwords. Note that you may not have a Wi-Fi driver installed on your virtual OS. I have this driver installed. If you want, you can use your host PC for this purpose.

In order to access the stored access points on the victim machine, you need to run the following command:

netsh wlan show profiles

If you run this command in your Command Prompt, you will see all the access points you have connected with your PC. But we want to access the passwords, not the access points. Here is the screenshot for my PC:

Figure 8.20 – Connected access points

In order to get the passwords, you have to write the name of the access point and give an additional parameter, key=clear, to the command...