LaZagne
SecLists
LaZagne | SecLists | |
---|---|---|
7 | 177 | |
9,094 | 53,701 | |
- | - | |
4.9 | 9.6 | |
4 months ago | 4 days ago | |
Python | PHP | |
GNU Lesser General Public License v3.0 only | MIT License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
LaZagne
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Bruteforcing Firefox logins.json key4.db
I tried to use https://github.com/AlessandroZ/LaZagne but it only tried a dictionary of 500 passwords + tries to bruteforce 3 lenght passwords.
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Blue Team...What tools can you not live with out?
You can use Lazagne to get the passwords saved in browsers - https://github.com/AlessandroZ/LaZagne
- Why I don't hear about malware targetting password managers?
- Favorite GitHub projects?
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subprocess
temp_dire = tempfile.gettempdir() os.chdir(temp_dire) download("https://github.com/AlessandroZ/LaZagne/releases/download/2.4.3/lazagne.exe")
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Customs confiscated and scanned our mobile phones in Sydney
It will basically do a search of the entire device, and in the case of computers (Windows at least) they will run benign malware on your system to retrieve passwords. This isn't fool proof and it will likely miss anything that wasn't saved in your browser (not including password managers thankfully). It will use keywords for fraud, child exploitation material, terrorism etc and where there is a match it will copy the file and save it for further analysis (if need be). Basically while the scan is happening and when its finished they will see a massive summary of thumbnails of every image and video you have for the analyst to then double check if anything bypassed the filter. It will also, based on keywords, show other files like documents that made a match. Note that the filter is also based on hash values as well as file names, but given the broad nature of keywords it will likely grab a lot of useless files - if you have the movie 'Baby Driver' on your computer, it will copy it and flag it as child exploitation material for example. I guess this shotgun approach is better than nothing.
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Does anyone have a code to get into Snapchat?
If you logged in in your pc once it might still be on there somewhere, try using LaZagne (https://github.com/AlessandroZ/LaZagne)
SecLists
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Where can I find a large list of common usernames?
https://github.com/danielmiessler/SecLists/blob/master/Usernames/xato-net-10-million-usernames.txt is not enough usernames
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DarkBeam leaks billions of email and password combinations
This reminds me of [0] where they maintain composite lists of frequently used passwords. Also in the repo is probably my favorite pull request ever [1].
[0] https://github.com/danielmiessler/SecLists
[1] https://github.com/danielmiessler/SecLists/pull/155
- Would you take this order?
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What's the problem with my API?
Maybe swagger.txt
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I had a machine running for two weeks on the public cloud. Every few seconds there was an automated SSH login attempt. Here is the full list of usernames - some of which are quite curious.
Typical of the sorts of information a tester/attacker might be using from: Daniel Miessler's SecLists
- How does one find a list of banned/breached passwords to add to our Azure Custom Password Block list?
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[OC] I updated our famous password table for 2023
Oh, and then you have this.
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Join Celebrations! Appwrite 1.3 Ships Relationships
You can now also enable a rule for password dictionary. Appwrite knows what are the most common passwords, and with this rule enabled, it will not allow you users to set any of those passwords. It prevents your users from having passwords like password, 123456678, or qwertyui. Appwrite currently knows the 10,000 most commonly used passwords thanks to the same list used by other industry-leading auth providers. You can check out the dictionary list on GitHub.
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Help crack wpa2
Try wifite if you don’t know how to use hashcat it is pretty simple. Hashcat is pretty easy as well I am to lazy to get on my laptop right now but just get the right wordlist Seclist has a shit load of them https://github.com/danielmiessler/SecLists
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Help me find the code
Fellow rust players know the way
What are some alternatives?
AlanFramework - A C2 post-exploitation framework
Probable-Wordlists - Version 2 is live! Wordlists sorted by probability originally created for password generation and testing - make sure your passwords aren't popular!
KeePassHax - A tool to extract a KeePass master password from memory
gobuster - Directory/File, DNS and VHost busting tool written in Go
KeeFarce - Extracts passwords from a KeePass 2.x database, directly from memory.
wpscan - WPScan WordPress security scanner. Written for security professionals and blog maintainers to test the security of their WordPress websites. Contact us via [email protected]
KeeThief - Methods for attacking KeePass 2.X databases, including extracting of encryption key material from memory.
big-list-of-naughty-strings - The Big List of Naughty Strings is a list of strings which have a high probability of causing issues when used as user-input data.
RIP - Free,Open-Source,Cross-platform agent and Post-exploiton tool written in Golang and C++.
btcrecover - An open source Bitcoin wallet password and seed recovery tool designed for the case where you already know most of your password/seed, but need assistance in trying different possible combinations.
VaultBreaker - A toolset designed for attacks against common password managers.
english-words - :memo: A text file containing 479k English words for all your dictionary/word-based projects e.g: auto-completion / autosuggestion