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telot

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Posts posted by telot

  1. Theres no way its still the fon. That hardware is all EOL and impossible to find in quantity. I've built a version of the interceptor using a raspberry pi, its pretty easy really. If you're interested, its on the Interceptor page of these forums.

    And yes, it would be possible to do this with the MarkIV (since it has two eth ports) and can be done with the MarkV with a USB ethernet adapter. I don't think the interceptor for the pineapple ever came to fruition (see wut I did there). It'd be easy enough to do, I just don't think the demand was ever significant.

    Heres a link to my How-To with the raspberry pi - it also hints at DigiNinja possibly coming out with an adaptation of the interceptor for the MarkIV...

    https://forums.hak5.org/index.php?/topic/28420-the-monkeys-back-the-interceptor-lives-again/

    telot

  2. One (the AR) is also the processor. The other (the realtek RTL) is a common and much beloved chip well supported by various wifi hacking tools. Both should be able to be put into monitor mode for sniffing, and certainly managed mode for connecting to a wifi accesspoint for ICS. I would go with the AR chip for ICS and use the realtek for sniffing/deauthing/scanning. The realteks are known to be a bit finicky if you try and use them as acutal wifi cards (as you are when you do ICS).

    I don't have my mark5 yet (stupid me cheaped out on the shipping) so I'm sorry I don't know which is which by default (is AR wlan0? that would be my guess anyways). Maybe someone who actually has one can chime in :)

    telot

  3. Probably the same way as the MK4. It will require sacrificing something larger than a chicken though. A largish goat should work, if not find a full grown sheep. If you don't want to go that route, you could create a linux vm and use that, it will be much easier, and way less headaches to set up.

    Haha I had to use a scottish highland cow to get mine working (before I bit the bullet and decided to just sacrifice battery life and run a VM).

    telot

  4. The two things I was most curious about this phone was battery life (thanks for answering that one!) and speedyness. Does it take 10 minutes to load metasploit? Or is it pretty snappy? Thanks for the review spazi - enjoy the new wifi toy! And for $80, I would not have passed that up either!

    telot

  5. As a kid, I always said it as hyphen, as my first name is hypenated, I was trained young. In highschool (when I started getting into linux in a meaningful way) it somehow got morphed into 'dash'. Now that I'm a sysadmin, and avid fan of hak5, I changed it to 'tack'. Really its just lazyness - as I progress more and more into linux I get lazier and lazier (my mentor taught me that the best sysadmins are the laziest sysadmins). tack is just easier to say, and not everyone understands it, so its efficient and l33t :D

    telot

  6. Shifting the point of trust is really key here. Thanks for mentioning it Seb. See this merely as a way to secure your otherwise open wifi/Ethernet connection from your immediate neighbors/landlords/hotel owners. This is not a secured connection to websites on the net. It's a secured connection to your VPN server, and that's it. Just a friendly FYI in case you don't already know/respect this.

    Now, depending how much traffic you're going to put through this VPN, you may want to look at commercial VPN services. As a near-constant traveler (job...) I've found that vyprvpn has been a great investment for my company. Security, reliability, and flexibility is all there (l2tp and IPSec is available in addition to the craptastic ptpp).

    If you're not planning on pushing too much traffic through (no Netflix, YouTube, etc), you can get a cheap vps and install open VPN or whatever. Just beware their bandwidth restrictions when signing up. I've fund vps as cheap as $15/year - much cheaper than the $5-10/month you'll spend with a commercial VPN service.

    If you'd care to do a write up and post it to these forums once you've completed this setup, I'm sure a lot of us would enjoy! Good luck Yamada Taro!

    telot

  7. Hey webdirector - grats on getting a bonified cell router! I'm no longer the only one lol

    To be honest, I've never used the wan port on my pineapple...like ever. Does your router allow you to change its internal IP and its DHCP? I've always just disabled DHCP at the router and set the routers IP to 172.16.42.42, thereby mimicing a computer. Then I port forward 1471 to 172.16.42.1 so I can reach the web interace, in addition to forwarding port 22 for ssh access. Sorry I couldn't be of more help with your wan-port usage example, hopefully the POE port will give you better results. Cheers!

    telot

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