I was at first, but since then I have tried files converted in text edit, textmate, microsoft word, and open office. None of them work. Has anyone gotten a wordlist to work? -jake On 4/3/07, Erick van Rijk <emvr@xxxxxx> wrote:
Is the problem perhaps that you are reading not a plain text file but something like RTF or word what contain extra formatting lines.? Erick On Apr 1, 2007, at 01:20 , Jake Trimble wrote: > Thanks for your quick responses. I am trying to crack a 40-bit > Apple Key. I think thats what it is. I am sharing my internet via > an imac from ethernet (the modem) to the airport. I have cracked > it using a weak scheduling attack and injection in 15 minutes with > a wusb11 (ver2.5), but I am trying to use a wordlist this time. > > -jake > > On Mar 31, 2007, at 5:02 PM, Matt Gibson wrote: > >> On 31 Mar 2007, at 20:09, Jake Trimble wrote: >> >>> No, my password is just 5 characters long... Let's say that my >>> password was hello. I would create a .txt file in textedit that >>> only contains "hello" on a single line, and kismac would say that >>> the password was not found. Has anyone had a single crack with a >>> wordlist here? >>> -jake >> >> Oh, okay, I thought you might be using WPA, which is what I'd been >> looking at, but the minimum password length for that is 8 >> characters, isn't it? What kind of password are you trying to >> crack? (Not that I think I can help much, I'm afraid, but it's the >> logical next question for anyone else who wants to jump in and >> help...) >> >> Cheers, >> >> Matt >> >> >> >> > >