суббота, 21 июля 2012 г.

Anti – Android Network Toolkit and 7″ Tablet make a $99 Pentesting Platform

Every once in a while you run into a product that just makes you sit back and say – “Wow!”
I just picked up a 7? Polaroid tablet for $99 and was stunned at how good it works. The screen quality, how smooth it ran and how responsive it was. In some functions it works better than my trusty iPad that cost a whole lot more.
Well, I wanted to see how well the Android Tablet could work as a pentesting platform and found “Anti” the Android Network Toolkit by zImperium. I was stunned.
I just used the “Free” version, and within seconds I was looking at a network map of all the machines on my network. Anti runs nmap scans, including an intrusive scan to detect device Operating Systems and vulnerabilities. Once the scan is done, it can take a while, you can click on individual systems and are presented with a tool option menu. These options include:
Attack, DoS, Cracker, Replace Image, Spy, Man in the Middle
Some of the more advanced tools require you to purchase “Anti credits” to run them. But with the free version, you can view available networks, and run scans against them.
I ran it on my wireless network and was able to view a wired system. For a short period of time, I could see a text list of what websites the computer was visiting, and even images from the visited websites. The options even included “View Passwords”, but this did not seem to be enabled in the free version. Obviously it was working in some sort of Man-in-the-Middle mode to be able grab the information off of a wired lan system connected to a switch. Very interesting.
And this was just the free version, the paid versions reportedly includes remote exploit capability.
Anti also includes a reporting feature so you can keep a track of vulnerable systems found during your pentest. Using Anti on a cheap $99 Android tablet really opens up a lot of possibilities for pentesters.



Комментариев нет:

Отправить комментарий