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Resources => Tools => Topic started by: m0wgli on March 12, 2013, 04:52:19 PM



Title: CrackStation's Password Cracking Dictionary
Post by: m0wgli on March 12, 2013, 04:52:19 PM
I haven't used this personally, but it may be of interest to someone:

Quote
4.2 GiB compressed. 15 GiB uncompressed.
1,493,677,782 words

http://57un.wordpress.com/2013/03/09/a-big-password-cracking-wordlist/

Quote
What's in the list?

The list contains every wordlist, dictionary, and password database leak that I could find on the internet (and I spent a LOT of time looking). It also contains every word in the Wikipedia databases (pages-articles, retrieved 2010, all languages) as well as lots of books from Project Gutenberg. It also includes the passwords from some low-profile database breaches that were being sold in the underground years ago.

http://crackstation.net/buy-crackstation-wordlist-password-cracking-dictionary.htm


Title: Re: CrackStation's Password Cracking Dictionary
Post by: prats84 on March 12, 2013, 11:55:43 PM
Hmm.. interesting... Would putting this sort of content on your blog or site, cause legal issues ?




Title: Re: CrackStation's Password Cracking Dictionary
Post by: Algalord on March 24, 2013, 08:05:55 PM
How do you use the file with JTR?

Everytime I try it I get:
Code:
fopen: /root/Desktop/crackstation.txt.gz: Value too large for defined data type


Title: Re: CrackStation's Password Cracking Dictionary
Post by: ajohnson on March 24, 2013, 09:03:00 PM
How do you use the file with JTR?

Everytime I try it I get:
Code:
fopen: /root/Desktop/crackstation.txt.gz: Value too large for defined data type

Are you passing JTR the compressed file? You need to extract it first.


Title: Re: CrackStation's Password Cracking Dictionary
Post by: Algalord on March 24, 2013, 10:35:17 PM
Tried gzip, gunzip, tar, etc. nothing seemed to worked.

Then I tried renaming the file to .lst and .txt but it all gave me the same error.

I'm re-downloading the file just to rule out it being corrupted. :-\


Any tips?


Title: Re: CrackStation's Password Cracking Dictionary
Post by: ajohnson on March 25, 2013, 07:41:54 AM
file <filename> should tell you what type of file it is. It would be odd to see .gz be something other than gunzip though.

You're not going to be able to just rename it.


Title: Re: CrackStation's Password Cracking Dictionary
Post by: impelse on March 25, 2013, 10:25:32 AM
I do not know, normally I prefer one general list and one specific list like sport, hobbies, etc, etc.