On Mon, Mar 27, 2017 at 11:33:07AM +0200, Raphael Hertzog wrote:
> I'm not a penetration tester myself. But a good starting point is to
> not use "http" at all on connections that you do not trust and also using
> tools to ensure that you get the same https certificate that you use to
> get over a
On Mon, 27 Mar 2017, Thibaut Paumard wrote:
> Thanks for the pointer. Just out of curiosity, do you intend on using
> the blends framework for the pkg-security team?
This is not part of any current plan but I have no objection if someone
wants to do the required work.
> If you have pointers about
Hi,
Le 25/03/2017 à 11:44, Raphael Hertzog a écrit :
> Hi,
>
> On Sat, 25 Mar 2017, Thibaut Paumard wrote:
>> I'm not sure of the benefit for the project of shipping this,
>
> This is a tool that is shipped in Kali Linux, a Debian derivative and we
> are trying to merge back packages useful for
Hi,
On Sat, 25 Mar 2017, Thibaut Paumard wrote:
> I'm not sure of the benefit for the project of shipping this,
This is a tool that is shipped in Kali Linux, a Debian derivative and we
are trying to merge back packages useful for penetration testers into
Debian. The benefit is clear for that cat
"Interesting" software.I'm not sure of the benefit for the project of shipping this, but do we have ways of protecting our users from it?Regards, Thibaut.Le 24 mars 2017 2:19 PM, Sophie Brun a écrit :Package: wnpp
Severity: wishlist
Owner: Sophie Brun
* Package name : wifiphisher
Versi
Package: wnpp
Severity: wishlist
Owner: Sophie Brun
* Package name: wifiphisher
Version : 1.2
Upstream Author : sophron
* URL : http://wifiphisher.org/
* License : GPL-3
Programming Lang: Python
Description : Automated phishing attacks against Wi-Fi ne
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