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Any Computer hackers out there?

  • Thread starter Thread starter plifter
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plifter

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Is there a way I can spy on someone over the web? Basically I want to be able to track what websites they go to. I know there is software to do this but my problem is that I don't have access to that person's PC to install it. Is there a way to spy from a remote location?
 
Static IP?

If she has a static IP type,
snoop -v tcp port 80 from <her IP address> |more

This may not work if her ISP has her behind Nortel or Agilent switches.
 
Re: Static IP?

r00+ said:
If she has a static IP type,
snoop -v tcp port 80 from <her IP address> |more

This may not work if her ISP has her behind Nortel or Agilent switches.

from where do you run that command? I tried it on the DOS command prompt window and it didn't recognize 'snoop'.

OH, and how do I keep this from happening to me?
 
I'm pretty sure that snoop is a Unix command. But you can search the web and find similar programs that can do the same thing for free.
 
This is a Solaris command. I'm pretty sure. To spy someone pretty easy. First you need to get her IP. You can have her send you an e-mail, chat on icq or anything which could provides her IP. Then with a software like Hack2o, PedoWatch, or any port sniffer its pretty easy.
 
Yeah where is the IP from an email and where do you get these programs? Plus this only shows you the sites they go to right? I know if you can get on their computer that this program "chat nanny" will show you the sites and log everything talked about on ANY messanger.....very cool.

Star
 
some good info but,

If she is using AOL, you are gonna have a hell of a time getting to her PC. AOL does not offer a direct connect to the net, instead your connection goes to the servers at AOL and then gets routed to the net. If you can get your hands on a unix box you will get the info you want much faster.

Mitch
 
Send the trojan hack exe file in an Email with a subject of:
"Click and run for nude pic's of Llammas with Britany Spears"
 
just use a trojan like subseven or deepthroat, and bind it to an exe, problem is getting on their computer, easiest way is if you know whom they talk to send an email from that name to their account with the trojan, easy stuff....
 
Remote location.

What do you mean by remote location? If you're wanting to snoop out a machine over the web, good luck. Snoop was designed to change the Ethernet Interface of the snooper into promiscuous mode, and then track down data between a specified host(s)/port(s). It's meant for internal tracking, not external, though it can be pulled off one of two ways:

- Nonswitched LAN (Bahahaha!)
- Switched LAN, but you have access to the switch. Configure it to dump to you.

Theoretically you should also be able to spoof your mac address and deceive the switch, but I've never tried it before so I wouldn't quote me on that. I doubt it works. For all the effort you're putting into trying to snoop, why not just root the son of a bitch? Be a fuck of a lot easier. Then drop a Background RAT process, and snoop away.

BO2k was my personal favorite. I can't tell you about any updates, I'm outta touch with CDC and the product for over a year now. I have no desire to visit the site either.

Just look up CultDeadCow.

But I'll tell you this, it's a lot more than just one command. A single script or Solaris command isn't going to get the job done.
 
Last edited:
Michigan man accused of installing spy software on estranged wife's computer

By LAURA POTTS, Associated Press


LIVONIA, Mich. (September 6, 2001 12:18 p.m. EDT) - When Steven Paul Brown and his wife separated, authorities say he installed spy software on her computer allowing him to track her every keystroke and read every file and message.

Buying the software is perfectly legal, but if a court determines Brown used it the way Michigan Attorney General Jennifer Granholm thinks he did, it could land him in prison for up to five years, Granholm said Wednesday.

"Just like breaking into someone's home, breaking into a person's computer is a crime," Granholm said. "These are crimes that hurt people because they make them feel vulnerable."

Brown, 41, was charged with installing an eavesdropping device, eavesdropping, using a computer to commit a crime and having unauthorized computer access. He could not be reached for comment Wednesday.

Granholm said Brown used a commercially available program called eBlaster to hack into his estranged wife's computer at her home in Warren this spring. The program caused all her Web surfing and Internet communication to be e-mailed to Brown as frequently as every 30 minutes without her knowledge, Granholm said.

When Brown allegedly shared some of that information with his estranged wife's friend, the Michigan Attorney General's High Tech Crime Unit was alerted and investigators seized Brown's computer equipment.

"People have to be very concerned about security," Granholm said. "You hate to be paranoid, but the reality is people get hacked all the time."

The eBlaster software, made by Spectorsoft, is advertised as a way to monitor computers while away. The Vero Beach, Fla., company's Web site reads: "Are you concerned about what your spouse, employees or children do on the Internet while you're away? You can't always be around to watch over their shoulders, so hire a second pair of eyes with eBlaster."

http://www.nando.net/nation/story/74080p-1045396c.html
 
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