Can i use this and with which option to remove duplicated passwords from several txt files?
So if i have a:
1.txt, 2.txt, 3.txt
to not have the same word on all of them and just keep it to one only...
?
I had a chance to play with this today. Very nice. One idea I had with this was to add a feature that takes a small list of keywords (locally relevant terms, phrases, business names, addresses, dates and custom lists like French if the enduser is from France etc...) and do some of the most basic functions in one go. I generally take the list and / leetify / upper and lower case / merge / clean / suffix and prefix the obvious (123, 123!, !, @ etc...) merge again / cleanup and add my custom lists to it. I know there are many different ways to do it but this technique has been pretty successful. I am running about 15-20% success rate on WPA and raise that a few points by using crunch to generate phone lists with the local area code and/or the area code of the owners hometown or provided cellphone number.
Its funny but pen-testing wireless is more fun than just telling the customer his password sucks (They always try to give it to me for some reason)
"Never do anything against conscience -- even if the state demands it."
-- Albert Einstein
Can i use this and with which option to remove duplicated passwords from several txt files?
So if i have a:
1.txt, 2.txt, 3.txt
to not have the same word on all of them and just keep it to one only...
?
@Scamentology
Thanks![]()
I spent quite a bit of time on it so far, and although I realise it is still basic stuff, I am pretty happy with it.
Thats a nice idea, you mean sort of like the CUPP method of approach but a little more expansive ?
@ASTRAPI
No, at the moment WLM won't read that, it was basically made for use on single lists.
@Tape
I don't think this tool is lacking anything. You have done excellent work and I use this script quite often now. In fact this script has assisted in adding to the 8 terabytes of passwords and phrases I have stored on a NAS. I think its getting out of hand.
"Never do anything against conscience -- even if the state demands it."
-- Albert Einstein