May 5th, 2009 -- Posted in Podcasts, e-life, technology |
How to use Steghide:
Go to this site: http://steghide.sourceforge.net/ and download a copy of Steghide. Extract the zip.
You want to hide a file. First thing you need is a file to hide it in. Choose a file – whether that be a music file, jpeg, word document… whatever – and save it inside the steghide folder, which was extracted from the zip folder. Also, save your file that you want to hide inside that same folder as well.
Open up your command prompt and open the steghide folder directory. Open the steghide.exe file. The last few rows of type will tell you how to embed and extract your hidden file.
Embedding:
Type into the command prompt: ’steghide embed -cf file.jpg (this is your regular file) -ef hiddenfile.txt’ (this is the file you want to hide).
Choose a Passphrase and you’re done! You’ll notice the original photo or music file has changed it’s byte size now that you’ve embedded something inside it.
Extracting:
Type into the command prompt: ’steghide extract -sf file.jpg’ and enter the passphrase. Now, you’ll see the extracted hidden file appear inside the same folder.
Your done! Simple, eh?
November 19th, 2008 -- Posted in Podcasts |
Download it here!
Show Notes
Is WPA Broken? Interesting stuff coming out of PacSec this year. Ars has a great writeup about it our check out Martin Beck and Erik Tewsâ paper Practical attacks against WEP and WPA (PDF). There is a proof of concept tool available from the Aircrack-NG folks. Take a look at Tkiptun-ng. At time of writing the tool is not fully functional. Something to keep an eye on.
Steve P. writes to us about the Helmer beowulf cluster. This 6xCore2Quad is sure to make any geek smile. Kitty approved too! While stuffing a personal cluster into an Ikea cabinet is novel in and of itself the mad scientist behind it has thought some insane cluster designs including the 50 tflop Helmer 2 and the 4 pflop Helmer 3. All I can say is I want one. Thanks for the links Steve.
Darren enjoys a Bondagesâ No Problem while Matt and Shannon stick with the margaritas.
More importantly Darren talks about Session Hijacking and demos a tool from Errata Security called Hamster and Ferret that, in conjunction with the latest 2.0 build of Jasager, an ICSâd EVDO connection and Tftpd32 weâre able to âsidejackâ with our little man-in-the-middle setup. Lesson learned? Be suspicious of any wifi. Check for signatures of trusted networks and tunnel your traffic. Weâll come back to this topic with a more indepth segment on Jasager detection and traffic encryption soon.
A note on trivia. Please answer trivia questions on the Hak5 forums from now on. We would love to continue doing dual winners but with growing prize costs we cannot. Also, if youâre interested in volunteering to help with trivia code challenges lend a hand in the Dev5 board.
Matt shows us how to convert a physical server into a virtual server locally using the free VMware converter tool and talks about some of the concerns you must consider when preparing to virtualize. If you have virtualization questions hit up Matt and weâll cover âem on future segments. Matt at Hak5 d0t org.
Alex W. writes with a question about screen recording. We highly recommend the open source Camstudio as well as FRAPS and Techsmithâs Camtasia Studio (warning: sticker shock may occur at techsmith.com). Paul (our âcamera guyâ) suggests checking out the new screen capturing functionality of the latest verison of VLC, especially if youâre on the Linux or Mac side.
As always weâd love to hear your feedback. Your questions, comments or concerns can be directed to HakHouse.com. Itâs a crazy interactive project weâre working on. Just wait âtill we get the web-enabled robots up in there.
Trust your Technolust
November 2nd, 2008 -- Posted in Podcasts, technology |
Episode 409 – HappyHakoween: Password Cracking Clusters, Remote Control Services, Wireshark Packet Filtering
Matt shows us how to turn anything into a service and provide a web frontend to manage them windows server, great for game server administration. Chris Gerling wraps up his three part series on Packet Sniffing with Wireshark techniques for packet filtering. Darren harnesses the CPU power of the HakHouse for good or evil to demonstrate cluster computing. Plus details on our Hak5 Halloween LAN Party!
Matt Lestock turns any windows application into a service using instsrv and srvany and demonstrates how we use this technique, coupled with Panel Daemon to delegate game server administration at the Hak5 playground.
Chris Gerling shows us some packet filtering techniques using the network analyzer Wireshark. He covers capture filters, display filters, colors and statistics. Read more on packet sniffing on his blog at ChrisGerling.com
Darren Kitchen talks about parallel computing. He touches on grid computing and massively parallel processors though he mainly focuses on clustering. Darren demonstrates simple windows password cracking techniques using an openMosix based image and discusses the theory behind setup. Darren has a lot of further reading for you to check out on his blog and would like to hear your feedback about building the Hak5 beowulf cluster!
And on a production note: We’ve switched over from a standard-def composite based video mixing solution to a high-def HDMI based system. Unfortunately until we get a Mac Pro and switch to Final Cut Pro for editing we’re unable to release a 720p version of Hak5. But we’re well on our way to bringing you guys truly high def technolust thanks to everyone who has continued to support this cause. Thanks!
Thanks for watching Episode 409! <3
September 17th, 2008 -- Posted in Podcasts, technology |
Reverse Engineering, Graphical Firewall Configuration, Inside the pineapple: Jasager demo, and Remember the BBS?
You can download this episode via iTunes by subscribing to Hak5 (our old subscription doesn’t work atm, so the best way to get the iTunes version is by simply resubscribing.)