:
:

Powered by GetResponse email marketing software

Anyone Can Make Money Online

Why You Need To Read This Blog About "Anyone Can Make Money Online"

Sunday, April 19, 2020

Testing SAML Endpoints For XML Signature Wrapping Vulnerabilities

A lot can go wrong when validating SAML messages. When auditing SAML endpoints, it's important to look out for vulnerabilities in the signature validation logic. XML Signature Wrapping (XSW) against SAML is an attack where manipulated SAML message is submitted in an attempt to make the endpoint validate the signed parts of the message -- which were correctly validated -- while processing a different attacker-generated part of the message as a way to extract the authentication statements. Because the attacker can arbitrarily forge SAML assertions which are accepted as valid by the vulnerable endpoint, the impact can be severe. [1,2,3]

Testing for XSW vulnerabilities in SAML endpoints can be a tedious process, as the auditor needs to not only know the details of the various XSW techniques, but also must handle a multitude of repetitive copy-and-paste tasks and apply the appropriate encoding onto each message. The latest revision of the XSW-Attacker module in our BurpSuite extension EsPReSSo helps to make this testing process easier, and even comes with a semi-automated mode. Read on to learn more about the new release! 

 SAML XSW-Attacker

After a signed SAML message has been intercepted using the Burp Proxy and shown in EsPReSSO, you can open the XSW-Attacker by navigating to the SAML tab and then the Attacker tab.  Select Signature Wrapping from the drop down menu, as shown in the screenshot below:



To simplify its use, the XSW-Attacker performs the attack in a two step process of initialization and execution, as reflected by its two tabs Init Attack and Execute Attack. The interface of the XSW-Attacker is depicted below.
XSW-Attacker overview

The Init Attack tab displays the current SAML message. To execute a signature wrapping attack, a payload needs to be configured in a way that values of the originally signed message are replaced with values of the attacker's choice. To do this, enter the value of a text-node you wish to replace in the Current value text-field. Insert the replacement value in the text-field labeled New value and click the Add button. Multiple values can be provided; however, all of which must be child nodes of the signed element. Valid substitution pairs and the corresponding XPath selectors are displayed in the Modifications Table. To delete an entry from the table, select the entry and press `Del`, or use the right-click menu.

Next, click the Generate vectors button - this will prepare the payloads accordingly and brings the Execute Attack tab to the front of the screen.

At the top of the Execute Attack tab, select one of the pre-generated payloads. The structure of the selected vector is explained in a shorthand syntax in the text area below the selector.
The text-area labeled Attack vector is editable and can be used to manually fine-tune the chosen payload if necessary. The button Pretty print opens up a syntax-highlighted overview of the current vector.
To submit the manipulated SAML response, use Burp's Forward button (or Go, while in the Repeater).

Automating XSW-Attacker with Burp Intruder

Burp's Intruder tool allows the sending of automated requests with varying payloads to a test target and analyzes the responses. EsPReSSO now includes a Payload Generator called XSW Payloads to facilitate when testing the XML processing endpoints for XSW vulnerabilities. The following paragraphs explain how to use the automated XSW attacker with a SAML response.

First, open an intercepted request in Burp's Intruder (e.g., by pressing `Ctrl+i`). For the attack type, select Sniper. Open the Intruder's Positions tab, clear all payload positions but the value of the XML message (the `SAMLResponse` parameter, in our example). Note: the XSW-Attacker can only handle XML messages that contain exactly one XML Signature.
Next, switch to the Payloads tab and for the Payload Type, select Extension-generated. From the newly added Select generator drop-down menu, choose XSW Payloads, as depicted in the screenshot below.



While still in the Payloads tab, disable the URL-encoding checkbox in the Payload Encoding section, since Burp Intruder deals with the encoding automatically and should suffice for most cases.
Click the Start Attack button and a new window will pop up. This window is shown below and is similar to the XSW Attacker's Init Attack tab.


Configure the payload as explained in the section above. In addition, a schema analyzer can be selected and checkboxes at the bottom of the window allow the tester to choose a specific encoding. However, for most cases the detected presets should be correct.

Click the Start Attack button and the Intruder will start sending each of the pre-generated vectors to the configured endpoint. Note that this may result in a huge number of outgoing requests. To make it easier to recognize the successful Signature Wrapping attacks, it is recommended to use the Intruder's Grep-Match functionality. As an example, consider adding the replacement values from the Modifications Table as a Grep-Match rule in the Intruder's Options tab. By doing so, a successful attack vector will be marked with a checkmark in the results table, if the response includes any of the configure grep rules.

Credits

EsPReSSO's XSW Attacker is based on the WS-Attacker [4] library by Christian Mainka and the original adoption for EsPReSSO has been implemented by Tim Günther.
Our students Nurullah Erinola, Nils Engelberts and David Herring did a great job improving the execution of XSW and implementing a much better UI.

---

[1] On Breaking SAML - Be Whoever You Want to Be
[2] Your Software at My Service
[3] Se­cu­ri­ty Ana­ly­sis of XAdES Va­li­da­ti­on in the CEF Di­gi­tal Si­gna­tu­re Ser­vices (DSS)
[4] WS-Attacker
More articles
  1. Pentest Tools For Mac
  2. Pentest Tools Linux
  3. Hacker Tools Apk
  4. Hacker Tools Free Download
  5. Hacker Tools Free
  6. Hack And Tools
  7. Pentest Tools Windows
  8. Kik Hack Tools
  9. Hacking Apps
  10. Tools Used For Hacking
  11. Hacking Tools For Windows
  12. Pentest Tools
  13. Hacker Hardware Tools
  14. Hacks And Tools
  15. Hacking Tools Mac
  16. Pentest Tools Apk
  17. Ethical Hacker Tools
  18. World No 1 Hacker Software
  19. Hacker Tools Hardware
  20. Underground Hacker Sites
  21. Hacking Tools
  22. Hacking Tools For Beginners

Pwndrop - Self-Deployable File Hosting Service For Red Teamers, Allowing To Easily Upload And Share Payloads Over HTTP And WebDAV


pwndrop is a self-deployable file hosting service for sending out red teaming payloads or securely sharing your private files over HTTP and WebDAV.
If you've ever needed to quickly set up an nginx/apache web server to host your files and you were never happy with the limitations of python -m SimpleHTTPServer, pwndrop is definitely for you!
  
With pwndrop you can:
  • Upload and immediately share multiple files using your own private VPS, using drag & drop.
  • Decide to make files available or unavailable for download with a single click.
  • Set up custom download URLs, for shared files, without playing with directory structure.
  • Set up facade files, which will be served instead of the original file whenever you feel like it.
  • Set up automatic redirects to spoof the file's extension in a shared link.
  • Change MIME type of the served file to change browser's behavior when a download link is clicked.
  • Serve files over HTTP, HTTPS and WebDAV.
  • Install and setup everything using a bash oneliner.
  • Set up pwndrop to work as a nameserver and respond with a valid DNS A record to any sub-domain you choose.
  • Protect your admin panel behind a custom secret URL path and log in securely with your own username and password.
  • Never worry about setting up HTTPS certificates as pwndrop does everything for you in the background (including auto-renewals).
Its main goal is to make file sharing as easy and intuitive as possible, while implementing extra features to aid in red team assessments.
Frontend of pwndrop is developed in pure Vue.js + Bootstrap with no npm or webpack dependencies. The backend serves REST API and manages a local database, powered by GO language.

Write-up
If you want to learn how to use pwndrop or you want to learn what new features were implemented in recent releases, make sure to check out the posts on my blog:
https://breakdev.org/pwndrop

Prerequisites
If you don't yet have the server to deploy to I highly recommend Digital Ocean. The cheapest $5/mo Debian 9 server with 25GB of storage space will work wonders for you. You can use my referral link to get an extra $100 to spend on your servers in 60 days for free.
Register a new domain and point its DNS A records to your VPS IP. You can also register a domain and point its ns1 and ns2 nameservers to pwndrop instance IP - it will automatically respond with valid DNS A replies.
  1. Registered domain name pointing to pwndrop instance IP as a DNS A records or as a nameserver.
  2. Server with at least 512 MB RAM.
If you want to set up pwndrop without a domain, check below how to set up a local instance, which will not auto-generate HTTPS certificates.

Installation
Make sure there aren't any DNS or HTTP(S) servers running before you attempt to install pwndrop.

Oneliner
I do not recommend running oneliners, before downloading and checking the script code, but if you are really in a hurry, here it is:
curl https://raw.githubusercontent.com/kgretzky/pwndrop/master/install_linux.sh | sudo bash
This will download the latest amd64 release binary and fully install a daemon running in a background.

From binary
First you need to download the release package you want from: https://github.com/kgretzky/pwndrop/releases
Then do the following (this performs same actions to the oneliner):
tar zxvf pwndrop-linux-amd64.tar.gz
./pwndrop stop
./pwndrop install
./pwndrop start
./pwndrop status

From source code
First of all, make sure you have installed GO with version at least 1.13: https://golang.org/doc/install
Then do the following:
git clone https://github.com/kgretzky/pwndrop
cd pwndrop
make
make install

Quickstart
Make sure the pwndrop is running.
  1. Open the secret URL to authorize your browser: https://yourdomain.com/pwndrop (this is a default value; make sure to use the secret path, you've pre-configured)
  2. Open the admin panel URL in your browser: https://yourdomain.com/ (since you've authorized your browser, you will now see an admin panel login page)
  3. Create your admin account or login.
  4. Click the configuration cog in top-left corner and make sure you change the secret path to something other than /pwndrop.
You're good to go!

Running from CLI
You don't have to install pwndrop as a daemon and you can run it straight from the console.
usage: pwndrop [start|stop|install|remove|status] [-config <config_path>] [-debug] [-no-autocert] [-no-dns] [-h]

daemon management:
start : start the daemon
stop : stop the daemon
install : install the daemon using the available system manager (systemd, systemv and upstart supported)
remove : uninstall the daemon
status : check status of the installed daemon

parameters:
-config : specify a custom path to a config file (def. 'pwndrop.ini' in same directory as the executable)
-debug : enable debug output
-no-autocert : disable automatic TLS certificate retrieval from LetsEncrypt; useful when you want to connect over IP or/and in a local network
-no-dns : do not run a DNS server on port 53 UDP; use this if you don't want to use pwndrop as a nameserver
-h : usage help

Configuration
On first launch, pwndrop, by default, will create a new configuration file pwndrop.ini in the same directory as an executable. You can later modify it or supply your own, for example to pre-configure pwndrop before the installation to automate the deployment of a tool even better.
Here is an example config file with all available config variables with commentary:
[pwndrop]
listen_ip = "190.33.86.22" # the external IP of your pwndrop instance (must be set if you want to use the nameserver feature)
http_port = 80 # listening port for HTTP and WebDAV
https_port = 443 # listening port for HTTPS
data_dir = "./data" # directory path where data storage will reside (relative paths are from executable directory path)
admin_dir = "./admin" # directory path where the admin panel files reside (relative paths are from executable directory path)

[setup] # optional: put in if you want to pre-configure pwndrop (section will be deleted from the config file on first run)
username = "admin" # username of the admin account
password = "secretpassword" # password of the admin account
redirect_url = "https://www.somedomai n.com" # URL to which visitors will be redirected to if they supply a path, which doesn't point to any shared file (put blank if you want to return 404)
secret_path = "/pwndrop" # secret URL path, which upon visiting will allow your browser to access the login page of the admin panel (make sure to change the default value)
If you want to pre-configure your pwndrop instance before deployment using any of the installation scripts, put your configuration file at /usr/local/pwndrop/pwndrop.ini and it will be parsed the moment pwndrop daemon is first executed.

Credits
Huge thanks to @jaredhaight for inspiring me to learn Vue, with his Faction C2 framework!
Also much thanks to all the people who gave me pre-release feedback and supported me with their opinions on the tool!

License
pwndrop is made by Kuba Gretzky (@mrgretzky) and it's released under GPL3 license.




via KitPloit

Read more


  1. Pentest Tools Find Subdomains
  2. Tools For Hacker
  3. How To Hack
  4. Underground Hacker Sites
  5. Hack Tools Mac
  6. Hacker Search Tools
  7. Hacker Tools Github
  8. Hack Apps
  9. Hacker Hardware Tools
  10. Growth Hacker Tools
  11. Pentest Tools Apk
  12. Pentest Tools List
  13. Pentest Tools Windows
  14. Hack Apps
  15. Hack And Tools

WiFi Hacking On Tablets

Disclaimer: Don't hack anything where you don't have the authorization to do so. Stay legal.

Ever since I bought my first Android device, I wanted to use the device for WEP cracking. Not because I need it, but I want it :) After some googling, I read that you can't use your WiFi chipset for packet injection, and I forgot the whole topic.

After a while, I read about hacking on tablets (this was around a year ago), and my first opinion was: 
"This is stupid, lame, and the usage of that can be very limited".

After playing one day with it, my opinion just changed: 
"This is stupid, lame, the usage is limited, but when it works, it is really funny :-)"

At the beginning I looked at the Pwn Pad as a device that can replace a pentest workstation, working at the attacker side. Boy was I wrong. Pwn Pad should be used as a pentest device deployed at the victim's side!

You have the following options:
  1. You have 1095 USD + VAT + shipping to buy this Pwn Pad
  2. You have around 200 USD to buy an old Nexus 7 tablet, a USB OTG cable, a USB WiFi dongle (e.g. TP-Link Wireless TL-WN722N USB adapter works).



In my example, I bought a used, old 2012 Nexus WiFi. Originally I bought this to play with different custom Android ROMs, and play with rooted applications. After a while, I found this Pwn Pad hype again and gave it a shot.

The Pwn Pad community edition has an easy-to-use installer, with a proper installation description. Don't forget to backup everything from your tablet before installing Pwn Pad on it!

I don't want to repeat the install guide, it is as easy as ABC. I booted a Ubuntu Live CD, installed adb and fastboot, and it was ready-to-roll. I have not measured the time, but the whole process was around 20 minutes.


The internal WiFi chipset can be used to sniff traffic or even ARP poisoning for active MiTM. But in my case, I was not able to use the internal chipset for packet injection, which means you can't use it for WEP cracking, WPA disauth, etc. This is where the external USB WiFi comes handy. And this is why we need the Pwn Pad Android ROM, and can't use an average ROM.

There are two things where Pwn Pad really rocks. The first one is the integrated drivers for the external WiFi with monitor mode and packet injection capabilities. The second cool thing is the chroot wrapper around the Linux hacking tools. Every hacking tool has a start icon, so it feels like it is a native Android application, although it is running in a chroot Kali environment.

Wifite

The first recommended app is Wifite. Think of it as a wrapper around the aircrack - airmon - airodump suite. My biggest problem with WEP cracking was that I had to remember a bunch of commands, or have the WEP cracking manual with me every time I have to crack it. It was overcomplicated. But thanks to Wifite, that is past.

In order to crack a WEP key, you have to:
  1. Start the Wifite app
  2. Choose your adapter (the USB WiFi)

  3. Choose the target network (wep_lan in the next example)
  4. Wait for a minute 
  5. PROFIT!

SSH reverse shell

This is one of the key functionalities of the Pwn Pad. You deploy the tablet at the Victim side, and let the tablet connect to your server via (tunneled) SSH.

The basic concept of the reverse shells are that an SSH tunnel is established between the Pwn Pad tablet (client) and your external SSH server (either directly or encapsulated in other tunneling protocol), and remote port forward is set up, which means on your SSH server you connect to a localport which is forwarded to the Pwn Pad and handled by the Pwn Pad SSH server.

I believe the best option would be to use the reverse shell over 3G, and let the tablet connect to the victim network through Ethernet or WiFi. But your preference might vary. The steps for reverse shells are again well documented in the documentation, except that by default you also have to start the SSH server on the Pwn Pad. It is not hard, there is an app for that ;-) On your external SSH server you might need to install stunnel and ptunnel if you are not using Kali. The following output shows what you can see on your external SSH server after successful reverse shell.

root@myserver:/home/ubuntu# ssh -p 3333 pwnie@localhost
The authenticity of host '[localhost]:3333 ([127.0.0.1]:3333)' can't be established.
ECDSA key fingerprint is 14:d4:67:04:90:30:18:a4:7a:f6:82:04:e0:3c:c6:dc.
Are you sure you want to continue connecting (yes/no)? yes
Warning: Permanently added '[localhost]:3333' (ECDSA) to the list of known hosts.
pwnie@localhost's password:
  _____      ___  _ ___ ___   _____  _____ ___ ___ ___ ___
 | _ \ \    / / \| |_ _| __| | __\ \/ / _ \ _ \ __/ __/ __|
 |  _/\ \/\/ /| .` || || _|  | _| >  <|  _/   / _|\__ \__ \
 |_|   \_/\_/ |_|\_|___|___| |___/_/\_\_| |_|_\___|___/___/

 Release Version: 1.5.5
 Release Date: 2014-01-30
 Copyright 2014 Pwnie Express. All rights reserved.

 By using this product you agree to the terms of the Rapid Focus
 Security EULA: http://pwnieexpress.com/pdfs/RFSEULA.pdf

 This product contains both open source and proprietary software.
 Proprietary software is distributed under the terms of the EULA.
 Open source software is distributed under the GNU GPL:
 http://www.gnu.org/licenses/gpl.html

pwnie@localhost:~$

Now you have a shell on a machine that is connected to the victim network. Sweet :) Now Metasploit really makes sense on the tablet, and all other command-line tools.

EvilAP and DSniff

Start EvilAP (it is again a wrapper around airobase), choose interface (for me the Internal Nexus Wifi worked), enter an SSID (e.g freewifi), enter channel, choose whether force all clients to connect to you or just those who really want to connect to you, and start.


The next step is to start DSniff, choose interface at0, and wait :) In this example, I used a popular Hungarian webmail, which has a checkbox option for "secure" login (with default off). There are sooo many problems with this approach, e.g. you can't check the certificate before connecting, and the login page is delivered over HTTP, so one can disable the secure login checkbox seamlessly in the background, etc. In this case, I left the "secure" option on default off.



In the next tutorial, I'm going to show my next favorite app, DSploit ;)

Lessons learned

Hacking has been never so easy before
In a home environment, only use WPA2 PSK
Choose a long, nondictionary passphrase as the password for WPA2
Don't share your WiFi passwords with people you don't trust, or change it when they don't need it anymore
Don't let your client device auto-connect to WiFi stations, even if the SSID looks familiar

I believe during an engagement a Pwn Plug has better "physical cloaking" possibilities, but playing with the Pwn Pad Community Edition really gave me fun moments.

And last but not least I would like to thank to the Pwn Pad developers for releasing the Community Edition!

Related news


"I Am Lady" Linux.Lady Trojan Samples



Bitcoin mining malware for Linux servers - samples
Research: Dr. Web. Linux.Lady

Sample Credit:  Tim Strazzere

MD5 list:

0DE8BCA756744F7F2BDB732E3267C3F4
55952F4F41A184503C467141B6171BA7
86AC68E5B09D1C4B157193BB6CB34007
E2CACA9626ED93C3D137FDF494FDAE7C
E9423E072AD5A31A80A31FC1F525D614



Download. Email me if you need the password.
Related articles

Linux Command Line Hackery Series - Part 6


Welcome back to Linux Command Line Hackery series, I hope you've enjoyed this series so far and would have learned something (at least a bit). Today we're going to get into user management, that is we are going to learn commands that will help us add and remove users and groups. So bring it on...

Before we get into adding new users to our system lets first talk about a command that will be useful if you are a non-root user.

Command: sudo
Syntax: sudo [options] command
Description: sudo allows a permitted user to execute a command as a superuser or another user.

Since the commands to follow need root privileges, if you are not root then don't forget to prefix these commands with sudo command. And yes you'll need to enter the root password in order to execute any command with sudo as root.

Command: useradd
Syntax: useradd [options] username
Description: this command is used for creating new user but is kinda old school.
Lets try to add a new user to our box.
[Note: I'm performing these commands as root user, you'll need root privileges to add a new user to your box. If you aren't root then you can try these commands by prefixing the sudo command at the very beginning of these command like this sudo useradd joe. You'll be prompted for your root password, enter it and you're good to go]

useradd joe

To verify that this command has really added a user to our box we can look at three files that store a users data on a Linux box, which are:

/etc/passwd -> this file stores information about a user separated by colons in this manner, first is login name, then in past there used to be an encrypted password hash at the second place however since the password hashes were moved to shadow file now it has a cross (x) there, then there is user id, after it is the user's group id, following it is a comment field, then the next field contains users home directory, and at last is the login shell of the user.

/etc/group  -> this file stores information about groups, that is id of the group and to which group an user belongs.

/etc/shadow -> this file stores the encrypted password of users.

Using our command line techniques we learned so far lets check out these files and verify if our user has been created:

cat /etc/passwd /etc/group /etc/shadow | grep joe



In the above screenshot you can notice an ! in the /etc/shadow, this means the password of this user has not been set yet. That means we have to set the password of user joe manually, lets do just that.

Command: passwd
Syntax: passwd [options] [username]
Description: this command is used to change the password of user accounts.
Note that this command needs root privileges. So if you are not root then prefix this command with sudo.

passwd joe



After typing this command, you'll be prompted password and then for verifying your password. The password won't show up on the terminal.
Now joe's account is up and running with a password.

The useradd command is a old school command, lets create a new user with a different command which is kinda interactive.

Command: adduser
Syntax: adduser [options] user
Description: adduser command adds a user to the system. It is more friendly front-end to the useradd command.

So lets create a new user with adduser.

adduser jane



as seen in the image it prompts for password, full name and many other things and thus is easy to use.

OK now we know how to create a user its time to create a group which is very easy.

Command: addgroup
Syntax: addgroup [options] groupname
Description: This command is used to create a new group or add an existing user to an existing group.

We create a new group like this

addgroup grownups



So now we have a group called grownups, you can verify it by looking at /etc/group file.
Since joe is not a grownup user yet but jane is we'll add jane to grownups group like this:

addgroup jane grownups



Now jane is the member of grownups.

Its time to learn how to remove a user from our system and how to remove a group from the system, lets get straight to that.

Command: deluser
Syntax: deluser [options] username
Description: remove a user from system.

Lets remove joe from our system

deluser joe

Yes its as easy as that. But remember by default deluser will remove the user without removing the home directory or any other files owned by the user. Removing the home directory can be achieved by using the --remove-home option.

deluser jane --remove-home

Also the --remove-all-files option removes all the files from the system owned by the user (better watch-out). And to create a backup of all the files before deleting use the --backup option.

We don't need grownups group so lets remove it.

Command: delgroup
Syntax: delgroup [options] groupname
Description: remove a group from the system.

To remove grownups group just type:

delgroup grownups



That's it for today hope you got something in your head.
More info

BurpSuite Introduction & Installation



What is BurpSuite?
Burp Suite is a Java based Web Penetration Testing framework. It has become an industry standard suite of tools used by information security professionals. Burp Suite helps you identify vulnerabilities and verify attack vectors that are affecting web applications. Because of its popularity and breadth as well as depth of features, we have created this useful page as a collection of Burp Suite knowledge and information.

In its simplest form, Burp Suite can be classified as an Interception Proxy. While browsing their target application, a penetration tester can configure their internet browser to route traffic through the Burp Suite proxy server. Burp Suite then acts as a (sort of) Man In The Middle by capturing and analyzing each request to and from the target web application so that they can be analyzed.











Everyone has their favorite security tools, but when it comes to mobile and web applications I've always found myself looking BurpSuite . It always seems to have everything I need and for folks just getting started with web application testing it can be a challenge putting all of the pieces together. I'm just going to go through the installation to paint a good picture of how to get it up quickly.

BurpSuite is freely available with everything you need to get started and when you're ready to cut the leash, the professional version has some handy tools that can make the whole process a little bit easier. I'll also go through how to install FoxyProxy which makes it much easier to change your proxy setup, but we'll get into that a little later.

Requirements and assumptions:

Mozilla Firefox 3.1 or Later Knowledge of Firefox Add-ons and installation The Java Runtime Environment installed

Download BurpSuite from http://portswigger.net/burp/download.htmland make a note of where you save it.

on for Firefox from   https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/foxyproxy-standard/


If this is your first time running the JAR file, it may take a minute or two to load, so be patient and wait.


Video for setup and installation.




You need to install compatible version of java , So that you can run BurpSuite.
Related news
  1. Hacker Tools For Mac
  2. Hacking Tools Mac
  3. Hacker Tools For Mac
  4. Hacker Tools Hardware
  5. Hacker Tools Free
  6. Hacker Tools Free
  7. Bluetooth Hacking Tools Kali
  8. Free Pentest Tools For Windows
  9. Black Hat Hacker Tools
  10. Hacker Tools For Ios
  11. World No 1 Hacker Software
  12. Pentest Tools Review
  13. Hacker Search Tools
  14. Hacking Tools For Pc
  15. Pentest Tools Website Vulnerability
  16. Physical Pentest Tools
  17. Pentest Tools Alternative
  18. Hacker Tools Linux
  19. Hacking Tools Name
  20. Hacker Hardware Tools
  21. Hacker Tools Free
  22. Nsa Hack Tools
  23. Github Hacking Tools
  24. Hacking Tools For Windows 7
  25. Pentest Tools Apk
  26. Pentest Tools
  27. Hack Tools 2019