Ciphey
iodine
Ciphey | iodine | |
---|---|---|
27 | 58 | |
17,092 | 5,807 | |
2.4% | - | |
2.9 | 5.1 | |
about 2 months ago | 5 months ago | |
Python | C | |
MIT License | ISC License |
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Ciphey
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CyberChef from GCHQ: The Cyber Swiss Army Knife
I also discovered Ciphey. Neat little tool indeed, but it's being deprecated. It's mentioned in this issue[1] and being replaced with Ares[2]. Neither could decipher this strange encryption[3] I used it on :(
[1] https://github.com/Ciphey/Ciphey/issues/764
[2] https://github.com/bee-san/Ares
[3] "dEFLWWFKQWxRQW16RnkvbTZML0lsdz09" original text is "hacker"
- Ciphey – automated decryption/decoding/cracking tool
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Email Obfuscation Rendered Almost Ineffective Against ChatGPT
Check Ciphey, I have used several times before and overall it’s great. https://github.com/Ciphey/Ciphey
- How do you identify common encodings?
- This is from the Netflix series Dark. I hope this isnt very hard to decrypt. I would love to see this cipher get decrypted. Also a good way of suggesting to watch this.
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In CTFs, you'll often get a string of text to decode. Is there a good way to recognize how to decode it?
It can help you detect various encryption and encodings and even decrypt them. Ciphey
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How do I install Ciphey on Windows 10?
I followed the steps here . I am running Python 3.10 (64). When I try to install Ciphey using the instructions, on my cmd prompt I get the following:
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How do I get Ciphey to use more cores for decryption?
repo: https://github.com/Ciphey/Ciphey
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tools for decrypting
if you're looking for something that would decrypt most well-known encodings/ciphers, there's ciphey. but no such thing exists to decrypt every known file type because, if it did, everyone would be using it.
- CyberChef – The Cyber Swiss Army Knife
iodine
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Show HN: This Website Is Hosted on DNS
Reminds me of using https://code.kryo.se/iodine/ ( DNS tunnel ) and a empty prepaid card...
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DNS Exfiltration Tool
Obligatory dns tunnel software for exfil. It is super noisy if you do dns querylogging, so I'd not use it for anything major, but it is a fun research tool.
https://github.com/yarrick/iodine
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Fun with DNS TXT Records
It's worth noting that you (re) invented what iodine does: https://code.kryo.se/iodine/
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WiFi without internet on a Southwest flight
(https://github.com/yarrick/iodine)
It’s slow, but it works and is a handy “last resort” tool.
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Russia starts blocking VPN at the protocol (WireGuard, OpenVPN) level
While working in an environment where VPN connections were pretty much all blocked⁰ a friend of mine had success using https://guacamole.apache.org/ to access a remote machine¹. Not quite the same as a direct VPN connection but worth a try if nothing else functions, it looks enough like normal HTTPS traffic that he got away with it.
To keep your wireguard setup more as-is, you could try https://kirill888.github.io/notes/wireguard-via-websocket/ to tunnel that via a web server. In fact https://github.com/erebe/wstunnel which that uses could be used just as well with any other UDP based VPN.
I once tinkered with https://github.com/yarrick/iodine and successfully connected to resources over the wireless on a train, bypassing its traffic capture and sign-up requirement, so that might be an option, though I think fully blocking external DNS is more common now so this is less likely to work²³.
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[0] practically only HTTP(S) permitted, not even SSH, DPI in use that detected just using SSH or OpenVPN over port 443
[1] NOTE: be careful breaching restrictions like this, you are at risk of an insta-sacking if discovered, or worse if operating in some securiry environments!
[2] and the latency when it does work is significant!
[3] and that much traffic over port 53 might get noticed by the heuristics of data exfiltration scanner, encouraging sysadmins to notice and implement a way to block it
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Show HN: File distribution over DNS: (ab)using DNS as a CDN
There's also iodine, a C program that tunnels IPv4 packets over DNS. Useful for bypassing captive portals on wifi, since DNS usually isn't restricted.
https://github.com/yarrick/iodine
Regarding cloudflare DNS over HTTPS: It could be that it tries to server data encoded as JSON, which is impossible in JSON. Some control characters and bytes 128-255 cannot be represented as JSON strings.
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Show HN: Use DNS TXT to share information
A regular proxy on port 53 might work? Is it necessary to actually use DNS?
Otherwise there's https://github.com/yarrick/iodine
- Anything can be a message queue if you use it wrongly enough
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help with choosing a VPN to host (I'll explain)
Well, you're really exhausting your options here (and possibly your IT department's patience). Iodine would still be an option, it creates a tunnel through DNS traffic. Nearly impossible to block/filter out but you shouldn't expect a lot of bandwidth. Try it out! Although if you're only going to use low-bandwidth applications through the tunnel anyway you might as well use your own mobile data plan instead of your school's WLAN.
- DNS blacklisting in enterprise
What are some alternatives?
CyberChef - The Cyber Swiss Army Knife - a web app for encryption, encoding, compression and data analysis
dnscat2
juice-shop - OWASP Juice Shop: Probably the most modern and sophisticated insecure web application
miniProxy
CrackMapExec - A swiss army knife for pentesting networks
PHP-Proxy - Proxy Application built on php-proxy library ready to be installed on your server
jwt-cracker - Simple HS256, HS384 & HS512 JWT token brute force cracker.
Nginx Proxy Manager - Docker container for managing Nginx proxy hosts with a simple, powerful interface
github-readme-stats - :zap: Dynamically generated stats for your github readmes
inlets - Get public TCP LoadBalancers for local Kubernetes clusters
Stockfish - A free and strong UCI chess engine
Swiperproxy - A Python-based HTTP/HTTPS-proxy.