Cain & Abel is a password recovery tool for Microsoft Operating Systems. It allows easy recovery of several kind of passwords by sniffing the network, cracking encrypted passwords using Dictionary, Brute-Force and Cryptanalysis attacks, recording VoIP conversations, decoding scrambled passwords, recovering wireless network keys, revealing password boxes, uncovering cached passwords and analyzing routing protocols.
The program does not exploit any software vulnerabilities or bugs that could not be fixed with little effort. It covers some security aspects/weakness intrinsic of protocol's standards, authentication methods and caching mechanisms; its main purpose is the simplified recovery of passwords and credentials from various sources, however it also ships some "non standard" utilities for Microsoft Windows users.
Cain & Abel has been developed in the hope that it will be useful for network administrators, teachers, security consultants/professionals, forensic staff, security software vendors, professional penetration testers and everyone else that plans to use it for ethical reasons. The author will not help or support any illegal activity done with this program.
Download Cain and Abel 4.9.38
Download Cain & Abel v4.9.38 for Windows NT/2000/XP click here
MD5 - F392EEDA00CB8F2CFB1208B872614FDC
SHA1 - A3E2D538F5317F84879FB5F02A3C8F16C8FFF224
What's new in Cain and Abel 4.9.38
Cain and Abel 4.9.38 is faster and contains a lot of new features as follow
- Added TCP/UDP Large Send Offloading status detection on Windows Vista/Seven.
- Better handling of APR-SSL MitM threads.
- Fixed a problem with APR in Windows7 causing attacker's machine to be isolated from poisoned hosts.
- Speed improvement in Credential Manager Password Decoder for x64 operating systems.
- Fixed a Cain's runtime error when SIP/RTP sniffer filter is disabled.
- SIP, MGCP and RTP sniffer filters are now separated.
- Fixed RTP sniffer filter to avoid processing Link-local Multicast Name Resolution (LLMNR) traffic on UDP port 5355.
- Fixed RTP sniffer filter to avoid processing SSDP traffic on UDP port 1900.
- Fixed RTP sniffer filter to avoid processing Multicast DNS (MDNS) traffic on UDP port 5353.
- Improved RTP protocol validation function.
Source
• Cain & Abel
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