My suggestion? That search block in the upper right of the forum. This has been answered here at least a dozen times. Failing that, Google has 465,000 answers as well.
ive had luck with standard wpa cracking. by my understanding, you just deauth the connected user, and capture his handshake request. then use a password database and it eventually, finds the password.
on many wpa2 networks i notice their arent any clients connected! why is this? also, is there a way to crack the connection without using deauth?
any suggestions peeps?
My suggestion? That search block in the upper right of the forum. This has been answered here at least a dozen times. Failing that, Google has 465,000 answers as well.
Of course, if you really wanted to have some fun, go to Wal-Mart late at night and ask the greeter if they could help you find trashbags, roll of carpet, rope, quicklime, clorox and a shovel. See if they give you any strange looks. --Streaker69
ha, fair enough. did that shortly after posting, read up alot on rainbow tables, PSK and various other topics. unfortunately i dont have an nvidia card, id like to see how CUDA works...
There are applications out there that will utilize an AMD/ATI architecture as opposed to CUDA, cracking using this method is not possible unless there are stations (hosts) connected to the network that you can use to capture handshakes. May i suggest Reaver, this tool will attempt to attack the WPS key that is enabled by default on many routers and can crack the WPA/WPA2 key much faster than other methods and does not require a dictionary as the WPS PIN has a very low entropy.