The AOL Protocol
The AOL Protocol

The AOL Protocol

When you hear the phrase “The AOL Protocol”, I bet most of you immediately think of FDO, right?
Although FDO is a part of the AOL protocol, it in no way encompasses the big picture. When I use
the term “The AOL protocol”, I refer to how the AOL client and server interact with each other,
how data is prepared, how it is sent, and how it can be manipulated.

There currently exists no formal documentation of the AOL protocol, or at least one that is
publicly available. For this reason, I have taken it upon myself to strip the bits of
information from my feeble mind and write a document with at least basic information about
the AOL protocol. The information included in this document is what I have learned, from
exploration, help from others, and just stumbling upon it. I in no way guarantee the accuracy
of the information contained herein. That said, here is what I know.

ACK Tunneling Trojans

ACK Tunneling Trojans

– Arne Vidstrom, arne.vidstrom@ntsecurity.nu
Summary

Trojans normally use ordinary TCP or UDP communication between their client and server parts. Any firewall between the attacker and the victim that blocks incoming traffic will usually stop all trojans from working. ICMP tunneling has existed for quite some time now, but if you block ICMP in the firewall you’ll be safe from that. This paper describes another concept, that I call ACK Tunneling. ACK Tunneling works through firewalls that don’t apply their rule sets on TCP ACK segments (ordinary packet filters belong to this class of firewalls).

FPipe v2.1

——————————————————————————
FPipe v2.1 – Port redirector.
Copyright 2000 (c) by Foundstone, Inc.
http://www.foundstone.com
——————————————————————————

FPipe is a source port forwarder/redirector. It can create a TCP or UDP stream
with a source port of your choice. This is useful for getting past firewalls
that allow traffic with source ports of say 23, to connect with internal
servers.

TCP\IP: A Mammoth Description

_________________________________________________________________________ TCP\IP: A Mammoth Description By Ankit Fadia ankit@bol.net.in_________________________________________________________________________ TCP\IP or Transmission Control Protocol \ Internet Protocol is a stack or collection of various protocols. Aprotocol is basically the commands or instructions using which two computers within a local network or theInternet can exchange data or information and resources. Transmission Control Protocol \ Internet Protocol or the TCP\IP was developed around the time of theARPAnet......
Local Windows hacking for newbies

.-‘____________|______
| |
| Your computer |
| is dead… |
| and it was so alive | Local Windows hacking for newbies
| _______ |
| |.—–.| | Written by MiggyX for the Black Sun Research Facility
| ||x . x|| |
| ||_.-._|| | Contact : miggyx@amicoders.demon.co.uk
| `–)-(–` |
| __[=== o]___ | Coming together is a beginning, Staying together is
| |:::::::::::|\ | progress, Working together is success!
| `-=========-`() |
| You shouldn’t have |
| installed: |
| |
| -= Win’95 =- |
`———————`

IRC Hack

Hacking IRC – The Definitive Guide

Copyright 1996 klider@panix.com Welcome to Hacking IRC- The Definitive Guide. The purpose of this page if you have not already guessed is to provide what I consider optimal methodology for hacking IRC channels. In addition, I provide some of the better channels to hack as well as fun things to do while “owning a channel.”

Contents

Section 1— Why Hack IRC?

Section 2–Requisite Tools

Section 3–What It Takes To Gain Control

Section 4–Link Looker(LL)

Section 5–Bots and Scripts

Section 6–Multi-Collide-Bot(MCB)

Section 7–Pre-Takeover Preparation

Section 8–Thing To Do ONce You “Own” the Channel

Section 9–Best Channels to Hack

Soft-ICE [Read Me]

Please read the Soft-ICE for Windows 95 documentation for
the latest product information.
1) To install Soft-ICE for Windows 95, run SETUP.EXE and the install wizards
will guide you to completion. Once this is complete, please consult the
‘Starting Soft-ICE for Windows 95’ section of the documentation. Soft-ICE
cannot be run directly from Windows 95, or from a DOS box within Windows 95.

KeyLog95 [Read Me]

KEYLOG95.EXE is a WINDOWS95 version of keylogwn.exe. It is virtually Identical except

that it records the strokes into a file called c:\win\logx. It is perfect for hacking especially

in newer computers with windows 95 that do not contain a C:\dos directory. The only thing that

one would have to do is create a directory called c:\win.

The Hackers Handbook [Read Me]

T H E H A C K E R ‘ S H A N D B O O K
Copyright (c) Hugo Cornwall

All rights reserved

First published in Great Britain in 1985 by Century Communications Ltd

Portland House, 12-13 Greek Street, London W1V 5LE.

Early Phishing
Early Phishing

Koceilah Rekouche krekouche@pushstart.info

The history of phishing traces back in important ways to the mid-1990s when hacking
software facilitated the mass targeting of people in password stealing scams on America
Online (AOL). The first of these software programs was mine, called AOHell, and it was
where the word phishing was coined. The software provided an automated password
and credit card-stealing mechanism starting in January 1995. Though the practice of
tricking users in order to steal passwords or information possibly goes back to the
earliest days of computer networking, AOHell’s phishing system was the first automated
tool made publicly available for this purpose. 1 The program influenced the creation of
many other automated phishing systems that were made over a number of years. These
tools were available to amateurs who used them to engage in a countless number of
phishing attacks. By the later part of the decade, the activity moved from AOL to other
networks and eventually grew to involve professional criminals on the internet. What
began as a scheme by rebellious teenagers to steal passwords evolved into one of the
top computer security threats affecting people, corporations, and governments.

NetBus
NetBus

NetBus or Netbus is a software program for remotely controlling a Microsoft Windows computer system over a network. It was created in 1998 and has been very controversial for its potential of being used as a backdoor. NetBus was written in Delphi by Carl-Fredrik Neikter, a Swedish programmer in March 1998. It was in wide circulation before Back Orifice was released, in August 1998. The.....