Sorry, I've missed all this (haven't been on the net for a few days,
down at a holiday house).
Sounds like fun. What I think:
Idea 1: Good idea. Definitely do this.
Idea 2: Interesting... but probably not entirely needed.
Idea 3: Cool.
Idea 4: NO WAY. Detect the default from the SSID/Channel/Encryption.
Don't make it connect for the user.
Idea 5: Interesting, but don't want to make it skript kiddie heaven...
Idea 6: Could be done...
Idea 7: Hmmm. Bit too illegal. Why not just use ettercap?
Idea 8: There are already programs to do this.
Idea 9: This can sort-of already be done. Sort-of. Try the "beacon
flooding" option. I'll work on making it actually usable. If you turn
down the interval (with my advanced prefs) patch, it can be done.
interesting ideas though. Summer of Code sounds good.
On 17/04/2006, at 11:54 AM, Geoffrey Kruse wrote:
There is a patch on track for setting color based on crack probability. It would be pretty easy to adapt. I do however agree that kismac should not log in, leave that to the user.
Geoff On Apr 16, 2006, at 8:16 PM, gmail wrote:
Perhaps, although cruising around town with him, we saw a LOT of routers on the default channel/SSID/etc, but none of them we tried had the default password. There were two it flagged a different color (yellow, if I recall), that I was able to log into perfectly on my powerbook.
I need to email him, my mind's all confused now.
-Adem
On Apr 16, 2006, at 8:38 PM, Kevin Bringard wrote:
I think it just flags them differently if it meets a certain set of "default" criteria, like, the BSSID is "linksys" and the channel is "6" and the IP range is 192.168.1.x.
As far as I know (and I have not used Kismet in some time) it doesn't
actually log into the router and let you know if its using a default
password
Hope this helps..
-- Kevin
On 4/16/06, gmail <theholymacintosh@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:Huh. I could have sworn that on my bud's linux setup, kismet listed routers
with a full default setup showed up differently. But now that I think about
it, I have no idea how, since you're absolutely correct.
On Apr 16, 2006, at 8:02 PM, Barry Woods wrote:
No. Kismet isn't a cient manager, it just listens. You can't connect while
in rfmon.
On 4/16/06, gmail < theholymacintosh@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:few good ones.
Doesn't kismet already do this (idea #4)?
On Apr 16, 2006, at 6:24 PM, Barry Woods wrote:
Hahahahahahaha! Okay, I just don't want anybody to get into trouble. :)
On 4/16/06, Patrick Kelley <opticrealm@xxxxxxxxx > wrote:
I said that some of the ideas were crazy.
I call it, "brain-storming."
In photography, sometimes you have to take a lot of pictures to get aones.
In brain-storming, you have to think up a lot of ieas to get a few goodaddress, making Idea 4 somewhat untraceable! (untraceable = no prison
Anyways, if you implemented idea 6, then kismac would change your MAC
time!!!) (Just kidding...)down the list...
On 4/16/06, Barry Woods < barry99705@xxxxxxxxx > wrote:
Uhh, I think I'd like to stay out of prison, thank you very much.
On 4/15/06, Patrick Kelley < opticrealm@xxxxxxxxx > wrote:
Here are some Google Summer of Code Ideas. They get crazier furtherto login to the wireless router using the manufacturers' default password.
Idea 4) - If encryption was disabled, Kismac would automatically try
If it worked, a different color would be displayed in the map view.for the Google Summer of Code 2006?
On 4/15/06, Geoffrey Kruse < gkruse@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx > wrote:
I'll look into it :)
Geoff
On Apr 15, 2006, at 12:56 PM, Patrick Kelley wrote:
Is the Kismac project planning to put in a proposal to be a mentor
http://code.google.com/soc/
-------------------- Patrick Kelley 623.332.0290 http://web.mac.com/opticrealm/iWeb/ Computer Systems Eng. (Undergrad.) Arizona State University
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-------------------- Patrick Kelley 623.332.0290 http://web.mac.com/opticrealm/iWeb/ Computer Systems Eng. (Undergrad.) Arizona State University
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-------------------- Patrick Kelley 623.332.0290 http://web.mac.com/opticrealm/iWeb/ Computer Systems Eng. (Undergrad.) Arizona State University