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Message-Id: <E8E7429A-56AC-4FA3-BA22-5758C9FDDC0D@thorsheim.net> Date: Tue, 17 Jul 2012 22:19:24 +0200 From: Per Thorsheim <per@...rsheim.net> To: "john-users@...ts.openwall.com" <john-users@...ts.openwall.com> Subject: Re: Other tools and tool sets. Pipal is good, but I think you'll find Passpal even better. Yes, it is a newer tool from the ground up, with little imagination from the author in his choice of naming the tool. Take a look at www.thepasswordproject.com for more info and download. Best regards, Per Thorsheim Den 17. juli 2012 kl. 20:47 skrev Stephen John Smoogen <smooge@...il.com>: > IToday's SAN's ISC diary ( > http://isc.sans.edu/diary.html?storyid=13720 ) brought up a tool I had > not seen before: pipal ( http://www.digininja.org/projects/pipal.php ) > which I think is similar to the wm tool. The graphs and such are a > nice visualization for when you need to tell people why passwords are > easy to guess but what got my attention was the hashcat filters and > wondering if there was some way to build something similar for JtR or > if they would be useful there. Solar mentioned I should bring this up > on this mailing list so I have :). > > > -- > Stephen J Smoogen. > "The core skill of innovators is error recovery, not failure avoidance." > Randy Nelson, President of Pixar University. > "Years ago my mother used to say to me,... Elwood, you must be oh > so smart or oh so pleasant. Well, for years I was smart. I > recommend pleasant. You may quote me." —James Stewart as Elwood P. Dowd >
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