Nelson Brito
2. January 19th, 2010: Release Candidate (RC)
3. January 31st, 2010: Release to Marketing (RTM)
4. February 15th, 2010: General Availability (GA)
"Help me to develop this tool... I need "Beta Testers". To help me, please,
download the version BETA 3." (Nelson Brito)
.:[ Microsoft SQL Server Fingerprint Tool
1. Google Code Project Hosting @ http://code.google.com/p/mssqlfp/
2. Google Code Download @
___________._______________
\__ ___/| ____/\ _ \ T50: an Experimental Packet Injector Tool
| | |____ \ / /_\ \ Release 5.3
| | / \\ \_/ \
|____| /______ / \_____ / Copyright (c) 2001-2011 Nelson Brito
\/ \/ All Rights Reserved
Since the previous release version (H2HC), some improvements were introduced to this new version:
1. New License: It is, finally, licensed under GPL Version 2.0. Please, refer to LICENSE document for further information. The new project leader is Fernando Mercês (@FernandoMerces) and, as soon as possible, he will upload the source code to:
- http://t50.sourceforge.net/
/*
* $Id: .siganture,v 1.3 2009-12-11 09:22:54-02 nbrito Exp $
*
* Author: Nelson Brito <nbrito [at] sekure [dot] org>
Copyright(c) 2004-2009 Nelson Brito. All rights reserved worldwide.
http://fnstenv.blogspot.com */
Cheers.
/*
* $Id: .siganture,v 1.3 2009-12-11 09:22:54-02 nbrito Exp $
*
* Author: Nelson Brito <nbrito [at] sekure [dot] org>
Copyright(c) 2004-2009 Nelson Brito. All rights reserved worldwide.
http://fnstenv.blogspot.com */
> -----Original Message-----
Nelson Brito wrote:
> 1. Slammer was the very first Flash Worm,
Well, no, actually, Slammer was not a flash worm. A flash worm is a worm
which follows a precomputed spreading path, by using prior knowledge of
all the systems that are vulnerable to the particular exploit in use.
And Slammer didn't.
It is actually akin to a Warhol worm.
Please, be nice and wait for the code review!
Best regards.
Nelson Brito
Security Researcher
http://fnstenv.blogspot.com/
Find further details @ http://fnstenv.blogspot.com/2010/09/exploit-next-generation.html
Regards.
Nelson Brito
Security Researcher
http://fnstenv.blogspot.com/
“Exploit creation – The random approach” or “Playing with random to build
exploits”
Sunday, September 21, 2008
By Nelson Brito <nbrito@sekure.org>
-[ Introduction
It is just a matter of time to get things worse on the Internet. We saw
worms getting more and more sophisticated in last decade, and, believe me,
it could be worst. Nowadays we have botnets and a lot of worms and the
Nelson, good day.
Thu, Oct 02, 2008 at 06:53:43PM -0300, Nelson Brito wrote:
> > Well, actually that's because the polymorphic code for viruses and worms
> > came even before, and was already a beaten issue.
>
> I didn't get this age (Virus Age), sorry.
Then you'll be probably interested in a polymorph named 1260,
http://www.informit.com/articles/article.aspx?p=366890&seqNum=5
6. DATA Payload Support: The data payload support is back, and it can be
rand or user defined.
Best regards.
Nelson Brito
Security Researcher
http://fnstenv.blogspot.com/
For online information and news about Exploit Next GenerationR Compliance
Methodology, please, follow @Exploit_NG on Twitter.
Cheers.
Nelson Brito
Security Researcher
http://fnstenv.blogspot.com/
Meet you @ H2HC Seventh Edition!!!
Best regards.
Nelson Brito
Security Researcher
http://fnstenv.blogspot.com/
So I have no credits for this code (http://pastebin.ca/1957112). Some coward
released it, anonymously, writing my name on it.
Shame on you, coward!!!
Nelson Brito
Security Researcher
http://fnstenv.blogspot.com/
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