We have passwords for emails, databases, computer systems, servers,
bank accounts, and virtually everything that we want to protect.
Passwords are in general the keys to get access into a system or an
account.
In general, people tend to set passwords that are easy to remember,
such as their date of birth, names of family members, mobile numbers,
etc. This is what makes the passwords weak and prone to easy hacking.
One should always take care to have a strong password to defend their
accounts from potential hackers. A strong password has the following
attributes −
- Contains at least 8 characters.
- A mix of letters, numbers, and special characters.
- A combination of small and capital letters.
Dictionary Attack
In a dictionary attack, the hacker uses a predefined list of words
from a dictionary to try and guess the password. If the set password is
weak, then a dictionary attack can decode it quite fast.
Hydra is a popular tool that is widely used for dictionary
attacks. Take a look at the following screenshot and observe how we have
used Hydra to find out the password of an FTP service.
Hybrid Dictionary Attack
Hybrid dictionary attack uses a set of dictionary words combined with
extensions. For example, we have the word “admin” and combine it with
number extensions such as “admin123”, “admin147”, etc.
Crunch is a wordlist generator where you can specify a standard character set or a character set.
Crunch can generate all possible combinations and permutations. This tool comes bundled with the Kali distribution of Linux.
Brute-Force Attack
In a brute-force attack, the hacker uses all possible combinations of
letters, numbers, special characters, and small and capital letters to
break the password. This type of attack has a high probability of
success, but it requires an enormous amount of time to process all the
combinations. A brute-force attack is slow and the hacker might require a
system with high processing power to perform all those permutations and
combinations faster.
John the Ripper or
Johnny is one of the powerful tools to set a brute-force attack and it comes bundled with the Kali distribution of Linux.
Rainbow Tables
A rainbow table contains a set of predefined passwords that are
hashed. It is a lookup table used especially in recovering plain
passwords from a cipher text. During the process of password recovery,
it just looks at the pre-calculated hash table to crack the password.
The tables can be downloaded from http://project-rainbowcrack.com/table.htm
RainbowCrack 1.6.1 is the tool to use the rainbow tables. It is available again in Kali distribution.
Quick Tips
- Don’t note down the passwords anywhere, just memorize them.
- Set strong passwords that are difficult to crack.
- Use a combination of alphabets, digits, symbols, and capital and small letters.
- Don’t set passwords that are similar to their usernames.