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GENTLEMEN

Posted: 28 Oct 2010, 01:32
by 1v0ry_k1ng
GENTLEMEN

http://codebutler.github.com/firesheep/
Firesheep is a new, free Firefox add-on that makes it a snap for anyone to scan a WiFi network and hijack other peopleÔÇÖs Facebook, Twitter and other online accounts.

Firesheep was developed by Seattle web app developer Eric Butler and released over the weekend at the ToorCoon security conference. Butler claims that the purpose of Firesheep is to get websites to tighten up security:

ItÔÇÖs extremely common for websites to protect your password by encrypting the initial login, but surprisingly uncommon for websites to encrypt everything else. This leaves the cookie (and the user) vulnerable. HTTP session hijacking (sometimes called ÔÇ£sidejackingÔÇØ) is when an attacker gets a hold of a userÔÇÖs cookie, allowing them to do anything the user can do on a particular website. On an open wireless network, cookies are basically shouted through the air, making these attacks extremely easy.

This is a widely known problem that has been talked about to death, yet very popular websites continue to fail at protecting their users. The only effective fix for this problem is full end-to-end encryption, known on the web as HTTPS or SSL. Facebook is constantly rolling out new ÔÇ£privacyÔÇØ features in an endless attempt to quell the screams of unhappy users, but whatÔÇÖs the point when someone can just take over an account entirely? Twitter forced all third party developers to use OAuth then immediately released (and promoted) a new version of their insecure website. When it comes to user privacy, SSL is the elephant in the room.

The add-on is incredibly easy to use. Download the add-on. Log in to an open WiFi network and click a single button. The add-on starts capturing login data, displaying user names and photos in the sidebar. To log into the site as a particular user, just double-click on their name and youÔÇÖre in as them.

ItÔÇÖs very, very easy. And very, very scary.

Firesheep can capture login data for many big sites such as Facebook, Twitter, Flickr, bit.ly, Google and Amazon.

Firesheep is free and open source and works on Mac OS X and Windows (Linus support is on the way).

Now, Firesheep is an add-on for the Firefox browser, and Mozilla have a blocklist mechanism that can be used to cripple an add-on. But in this case MozillaÔÇÖs director of Firefox, Mike Beltzner, has said that Mozilla will not activate the kill-switch in this case because Firesheep doesnÔÇÖt exploit a vulnerability in the browser itself.
its every trolls dream and it works 100%, shit is SO lolz

Re: GENTLEMEN

Posted: 28 Oct 2010, 01:37
by Johannes
what have you done w it so far?

Re: GENTLEMEN

Posted: 28 Oct 2010, 01:40
by knorke
trolololo

Re: GENTLEMEN

Posted: 28 Oct 2010, 01:40
by KaiserJ
Image

haven't done any trololoing yet. but... worked a charm

Re: GENTLEMEN

Posted: 28 Oct 2010, 02:14
by zwzsg

Re: GENTLEMEN

Posted: 28 Oct 2010, 02:46
by Forboding Angel
For the win: https://www.eff.org/https-everywhere

Thankfully, for those of use using wordpress as backends, all that is needed is to put

define('FORCE_SSL_LOGIN', true);

and

define('FORCE_SSL_ADMIN', true);

in the config.php file. I hear that some other places aren't so lucky.

Re: GENTLEMEN

Posted: 28 Oct 2010, 12:32
by 1v0ry_k1ng
I think in only 3 dimensions... picasso thinks in about 70, how can I compete :(