EvilZone
Hacking and Security => Hacking and Security => : Bl@ck De@th August 11, 2013, 10:41:29 PM
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Hello i use Yamas on backtrack 5 R3 and i have encountered a problem. I think it´s something wrong with the sslstrip. I get a message in the Password Windows that appears.
cat: /tmp/yamas.txt: No such file or directory
But before when you choose with file to output passwords to it says
sslstrip will be listening on port 8080 and outputting log in /tmp/yamas.txt
chmod: Cannot access ´/usr/share/sslstrip/sslstrip.py': No such file or directory
Any ideas ? And yes i have tried to google it but i havent found any usefull info
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Are you sure you're running as root in BT5 or did you open an additional user account and are executing it from that one?
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Im sure but is it possible that sslstrip is not installed ?
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Wow you are clueless.
Please study some general linux stuff before even attempting things like this.
Looking at your cookies im probably right.
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Wow you are clueless.
Please study some general linux stuff before even attempting things like this.
Looking at your cookies im probably right.
this must be the worst fucking forum no help what so ever. Insted of sitting behinde
you keyboard and thinking your some fucking genius direct me
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Hi,
please calm down Bl@ck De@th. Proxxs advice was a good one. It does no harm to know something about the platform you run those tools on. You tried to search for sslstrip on your system (find / -name sslstrip.py)? If it is installed you should look for yamas configuration files and provide the right path to your sslstrip installation (don't even have a clue what yamas is but I am sure it has a configuration file.. lol). If you can't find sslstrip on your system you could simply install it to the path yamas is looking for it. If it is there and the path is correct have a look at the permissions. Maybe the user you start yamas with is not allowed to execute sslstrip. This is pretty, pretty basic linux troubleshooting. I can understand proxx's rage here. If you can't do the above on your own you are definitely missing fundamentals of linux usage and you should change that.
Cheers,
RBA
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Dont get mad when people speak their mind. Listen to what they are saying and fix it. Sometimes people can be sharp of words, but often times that necessary, and it does not necessarily equate to being rude or cruel. Especially in programming/hacking culture. We learn to truly speak our mind, because if your too soft on other people's work you end up with bad software and ignorant people. You need to learn to understand this and not take things so personally.
Suck it up, and learn from it.
Also, this forum is about learning. Walking you through something you could easily google just makes you stupider. If you read the introductory text, you must understand this. Noone's going to help people who make so little effort. What Proxx said was true. If your trying to do serious stuff on bt5, and you don't even know the basics...
My advice: Forget about hacking and sslstrip and tools for now. Learn programming and learn linux. Then apply it.
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this must be the worst fucking forum no help what so ever. Insted of sitting behinde
you keyboard and thinking your some fucking genius direct me
Before turning it into a flamewar Im gonna remind you that this forum is not skid101 helpdesk.
My advice might not be the most direct but it will help you in the long run , that I can promise you.
Some time from now your gonna look back and realize I was right.
One more thing, Im not the forum and judging based on the minds of one or two people isnt really enough for a conclusion dont you think.
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Hi,
please calm down Bl@ck De@th. Proxxs advice was a good one. It does no harm to know something about the platform you run those tools on. You tried to search for sslstrip on your system (find / -name sslstrip.py)? If it is installed you should look for yamas configuration files and provide the right path to your sslstrip installation (don't even have a clue what yamas is but I am sure it has a configuration file.. lol). If you can't find sslstrip on your system you could simply install it to the path yamas is looking for it. If it is there and the path is correct have a look at the permissions. Maybe the user you start yamas with is not allowed to execute sslstrip. This is pretty, pretty basic linux troubleshooting. I can understand proxx's rage here. If you can't do the above on your own you are definitely missing fundamentals of linux usage and you should change that.
This is what im talking about someone that actually helps. I know im far from a pro but proxy doesn´t have to comment if he is only gonna tell me what i dont know.
Insted direct me to a page where i can read this stuff. Not very hard
Cheers,
RBA
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you put the find command into a open terminal. "Ctrl+Alt+T" to open a term :)