koolkarnt Posted July 2, 2014 Share Posted July 2, 2014 Hey Everyone. Who has heard of Sophos? or Warbiking? prehaps you may know it as War Driving Sophos is a UK Based Security company and they are doing a very nice job of showing security experts the general habits of the people hungry for Wifi. Whats very intresting - is he is doing it all with the Hak 5 Wifi Pineapple. If you watch a video you can see it there - clearly James is not about to reveal what it really is loosly calling it a "Access point" but any one from here will see its a Mk 5. Latest News artical - 'Warbiking' reveals increasing need for Sydneysiders to change wireless security habitshttp://www.cmo.com.au/mediareleases/19781/warbiking-reveals-increasing-need-for/ For those of you in London, San Fran etc, you may find your city has already been "Warbiked" by this fellow. http://www.sophos.com/en-us/security-news-trends/security-trends/bottom-line/project-warbike.aspx As This fellow is not going to get to every town and city - it would be cool to see other members survey results. how does your town compare to the recent results of Sydney? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
jmelody Posted July 12, 2014 Share Posted July 12, 2014 Tiz an MKV for sure. Do we have an infusion that will plot the GPS locations on a map like the videos show, or was that plugged into the map after the fact? I've been using the Pineapple since the MKV came out. Until recently I felt alone, outside of our community, in knowing what it was and what it could do. Now, it seems, that people are at least familiar with the name Pineapple as a tool. I can't wait till DefCon for any new information we can get about the future of the MKV. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
koolkarnt Posted July 15, 2014 Author Share Posted July 15, 2014 Tiz an MKV for sure. Do we have an infusion that will plot the GPS locations on a map like the videos show, or was that plugged into the map after the fact? its Possible that this data was collected (for the maps) via the "wiGLE.net" wardriving app. you turn it on and drive down your street and pretty much every AP in range will be detected, noted with GPS cords, SSID name, and what encryption type it has. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
barry99705 Posted July 27, 2014 Share Posted July 27, 2014 its Possible that this data was collected (for the maps) via the "wiGLE.net" wardriving app. you turn it on and drive down your street and pretty much every AP in range will be detected, noted with GPS cords, SSID name, and what encryption type it has. You can also upload kismet files to wigle. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
koolkarnt Posted July 31, 2014 Author Share Posted July 31, 2014 Kismet is scary how it can see everything on the network Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
chrismyers2000 Posted March 24, 2015 Share Posted March 24, 2015 You can easily make your own map like that using kismet to capture and use giskismet to convert the .netkml file to a .kml file which you can open up in google earth. I set one of my dipswitch boot modes to automatically record AP names and GPS data using kismet_server. This is my current setup: "ifconfig wlan1 down; iwconfig wlan1 mode monitor; ifconfig wlan1 up; sleep 5; kismet_server"Here's a good tutorial on how to get kismet installed and set up on your wifi pineapple. I suggest changing the writeinverval= variable in the kismet.conf file to sometime shorter than 300 (default) because once you unplug it, you loose all the data that it captured since the last save. http://www.hackedexistence.com/project/wifi-pineapple/wardriving-with-wifi-pineapple-kismet.html Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
digip Posted March 24, 2015 Share Posted March 24, 2015 If its XML,just drag it onto google earth and it will plot them. You can do the same thing with GPX files from geocaching, it will parse it so long as it's in XML format. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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