In this guide you
will learn how to telnet <beginninea.shtml>,
forge email, <beginnineb.shtml> use
nslookup <beginninec.shtml> and netcat <beginnined.shtml> with Windows XP.
nslookup <beginninec.shtml> and netcat <beginnined.shtml> with Windows XP.
So you have the
newest, glitziest, "Fisher Price" version of Windows: XP. How can you
use XP in a way that sets you apart from the boring millions of ordinary users?
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Luser Alert: Anyone who thinks this GTMHH will reveal how to blow up people's TV sets and steal Sandra Bullock's email is going to find out that I won't tell them how.
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Luser Alert: Anyone who thinks this GTMHH will reveal how to blow up people's TV sets and steal Sandra Bullock's email is going to find out that I won't tell them how.
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The key to doing
amazing things with XP is as simple as D O S. Yes, that's right, DOS as in MS-DOS,
as in MicroSoft Disk Operating System. Windows XP (as well as NT and 2000) comes
with two versions of DOS. Command.com is an old DOS version. Various versions
of command.com come with Windows 95, 98, SE, ME, Window 3, and DOS only
operating systems.
The other DOS, which
comes only with the XP, 2000 and NT operating systems, is cmd.exe. Usually cmd.exe
is better than command.com because it is easier to use, has more commands, and
in some ways resembles the bash shell in Linux and other Unix-type operating
systems. For example, you can repeat a command by using the up arrow until you
back up to the desired command. Unlike bash, however, your DOS command history
is erased whenever you shut down cmd.exe. The reason XP has both versions of
DOS is that sometimes a program that won?t run right in cmd.exe will work in
command.com
Flame Alert: Some readers are throwing fits because I dared to compare DOS to bash. I can compare cmd.exe to bash if I want to. Nanny nanny nah nah.
DOS is your number
one Windows gateway to the Internet, and the open sesame to local area networks.
From DOS, without needing to download a single hacker program, you can do
amazingly sophisticated explorations and even break into poorly defended
computers.
You can go to jail warning: Breaking into computers is against the law if you do not have permission to do so from the owner of that computer. For example, if your friend gives you permission to break into her Hotmail account, that won't protect you because Microsoft owns Hotmail and they will never give you permission.
You can get expelled warning: Some kids have been kicked out of school just for bringing up a DOS prompt on a computer. Be sure to get a teacher's WRITTEN permission before demonstrating that you can hack on a school computer.
So how do you turn
on DOS?
Click All Programs > Accessories > Command Prompt
That runs cmd.exe. You should see a black screen with white text on it, saying something like this:
Click All Programs > Accessories > Command Prompt
That runs cmd.exe. You should see a black screen with white text on it, saying something like this:
Microsoft Windows XP
[Version 5.1.2600]
Your first step is
to find out what commands you can run in DOS. If you type "help" at
the DOS prompt, it gives you a long list of commands. However, this list leaves
out all the commands hackers love to use. Here are some of those left out hacker
commands.
TCP/IP commands:
- telnet
- netstat
- nslookup
- tracert
- ping
- ftp
NetBIOS commands (just
some examples):
- nbtstat
- net use
- net view
- net localgroup
TCP/IP stands for
transmission control protocol/Internet protocol. As you can guess by the name, TCP/IP
is the protocol under which the Internet runs. along with user datagram
protocol (UDP). So when you are connected to the Internet, you can try these
commands against other Internet computers. Most local area networks also use
TCP/IP.
NetBIOS (Net Basic
Input/Output System) protocol is another way to communicate between computers. This
is often used by Windows computers, and by Unix/Linux type computers running
Samba. You can often use NetBIOS commands over the Internet (being carried
inside of, so to speak, TCP/IP). In many cases, however, NetBIOS commands will
be blocked by firewalls. Also, not many Internet computers run NetBIOS because
it is so easy to break in using them. We will cover NetBIOS commands in the
next Guide to XP Hacking.
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