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02-14-2016, 07:24 AM
(This post was last modified: 02-14-2016, 07:39 AM by blitzkrieg.)
So I've looked at some examples of other cracking WPA2 handshakes, which is why this boggles me. Why am I getting what appears to be the shared hex key? Shouldn't it be the plaintext key? furthermore, if this really is the plaintext key, then I would have needed to set a rule to 36 characters (plus colons and SSID). I only set 10 characters. Anyways, here is my result.
ATT802:383bc8999eb2:5065f3fa89d1:8790560512
I know that the username/SSID is printed, which explains the "ATT802," but what is the rest? Is that hex? If so, how do I get the ASCII key? I tried plugging that into a converter and just got gibberish.
This is my first attempt at this process so bear with me while I learn. Thanks for the help.
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So after researching, it seems like the point of the handshake cracking is to obtain the ASCII derivative of this key/SSID combo.
http://security.stackexchange.com/questi...y-and-ssid
Is this hex key an expected response from hashcat (cudahashcat)? I also used the --show argument to spit this result back out to validate the finding (thinking there might possibly be a mismatched output).
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SSID: ATT802
AP MAC address: 383bc8999eb2
Client MAC address: 5065f3fa89d1
WPA-PSK: 8790560512
"I only set 10 characters" -> 8790560512 length 10.
What's the problem?
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(02-14-2016, 03:15 PM)rico Wrote: SSID: ATT802
AP MAC address: 383bc8999eb2
Client MAC address: 5065f3fa89d1
WPA-PSK: 8790560512
"I only set 10 characters" -> 8790560512 length 10.
What's the problem?
I didn't realize hashcat spit it out in that format. I was expecting just the passphrase but this format makes sense for a list of results to distinguish between them. I couldn't find the proper format in any manual or wiki here so that's why I asked. Thanks for the assist!
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that could be the wifi password
If memory serves me correctly you need 8-63 characters for wpa
the standard us keyboard has 95 characters including the space.