Router Keygen for Windows has arrived. The popular application to decrypt Android WiFi passwords is now available for the Microsoft operating system, with all the features it brings when it comes to testing WiFi network passwords. Just like the app for cellphones and tablets, Router Keygen for Windows interface is very simple. In the main window you'll have three tabs separating all the WiFi networks that can be found in your vicinity: on one side the ones supported by Router Keygen, on another the ones probably not supported, and finally the ones that you're sure not to be able to decrypt. On top of this, Router Keygen offers the option to do a manual setup (in case it doesn't find a network).
To do so you just have to enter the name of the network you want to verify and its MAC address. In a few seconds you'll be supplied with the information you want. Router Keygen is a very useful tool to check the security of your WiFi network password. In just a few seconds you'll be able to see if it's possible for someone to use your connection.
Or if it's possible for you to do the same.
Router Keygen is one of the that are available for Android and has now received a new update that will solve problems with some routers and other minor bugs. News of Router Keygen 3.2.0 Specifically the Router Keygen 3.2.0 update adds support for TeleTu/Tele2 routeres of an Italian operator acquired by Vodafone in 2012, the routers support the Mexican operator Maxcom and PTV, and fixes some compatibility issues with Alice and Cabovisao routers. News of Router Keygen 3.3.0 This latest version of Router Keygen adds support for routers wifimediaR-XXXX and improves the speed of the native calculation for Thomson routers using all available processor cores. What is Router Keygen?
Router Keygen is an application that can calculate routers passwords to decipher the WiFi keys encrypted with WEP / WPA. For it this app offers three methods, the first being the fastest and the slowest last. Using a dictionary (default).
It can be downloaded in the preferences menu. Using an existing Internet connection. You can enable this feature in the preferences, is a little slower than the first method because it has to wait for the recovery of the keys.
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Native Calculation (backup by default). With this method even without a dictionary and Internet access will be able to calculate the keys. However, this method is much slower than the others, because it can take up to 10 seconds on the Samsung Galaxy S2 or 2 minutes at low-end phones. Which routers are compatible?
WiFi Keygen EasyBox standard key calculation.
Hopefully some of you will find this table useful for pentesting WiFi routers. Please note that the figures shown in the far right column 'Time' are based on a Palit GTX 970 using oclHashCat. You will need to do your own maths for this, but it gives you a good idea of average crack times for a fairly standard £300 / $500 GPU.
For WPA2 with the GTX 970, my benchmarks with hashcat are;. 13,774,031,184 password hashes per day. 573,917,966 per hour. 9,565,299 per minute. 159,421 per second Anything marked as 'Never' and red will take more than a year to crack. Anything green is less than 1 week. Anything amber is unknown or will require a word list.
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For EE/Brightbox wordlist details, see (appears to have been taken down. Google cache search.) For NETGEAR details, see. Obviously most of you will find the SSID / Password Format / Length columns the most useful. Loving your work!
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Is there any merit to a random walk through the keyspace? Markov chains? Does the routers ssid/mac address influence random key generation? There also must be a non-repeating rule when generating these keys that states you can't have more than two (for example) of the same characters in a sequence. So if attacking a 2WIRE 0-9, 10char, would be a wasted attempt because of the 999 at the end. How drastically could you reduce the keyspace? I note your entry for virginmediaXXXXXX says 3 weeks, but its the same complexity as VMXXXXXXX-2G/5G at 6 days.
Wow, I have to say I am impressed with Xfinity on their default passwords in this case. Looks like I will have to settle for WPS pins on those instead. I'll update with my lockout findings. Thanks for the info.
FYI gemtek seem to be access point/4G routers or internal WiFi cards! The cat and mouse game continues with default passphrases. I could see some sort of decentralised OCLhashcat whatever with participants being rewarded with bitcoin or something. Does anyone know what limits the crack rate? Is it stream processors or is it raw clockspeed or both? Wheres the bottleneck? Which part of the silicon is OCL stressing?
Orange Wifi Hotspots
Xfinity on the other hand seems to be 16 chars hex. Is that 16 to the power of 16? Appears to be uppercase and numbers. Uppercase = 26 letters, numbers = 10 (including 0) (26+10)^16 = 7,958,661,109,946,400,884,391,936. Correction: On closer inspection, there does not appear to be any letters above F, which is pretty standard for a lot of router passwords.
Therefore you are correct bingowings85, it would be; (6+10)^16 = 18,446,744,073,709,551,616 Would take years to crack unless you have an amazing rig or a super computer. Therefore not worth bothering trying to crack this one via Brute Force. Stick to dictionaries. One point to note is that how hard a password is to crack tends to relate more to it's length, rather than it's complexity. Both help, but this Xfinity is a prime example of a password only using 2 types of digits but still being almost impossible to brute-force simply due to it's length. This, of course, does not apply should standard dictionary words be used, or obvious replacements such as $ for S and 3 for E. I will look at updating the table shortly, busy morning at work today!
Seems all new routers are trending towards impossible. I would say so, yes. The ability to capture a WPA/2 handshake is not something they can get rid of any time soon, as it's the way routers actually work, so the easiest way for companies to secure their routers is to simply make the password more difficult. Older routers are certainly the easier passwords, most of the time. One mitigation is to get better equipment, such as a rig of 8 x GPUs, but this is expensive. Or you could pay someone with a rig like this to do the cracking for you. Another option is to get a massive amount of hard drive space and create the rainbow tables required to crack passwords really quickly, but you're talking at least hundreds of Terabytes of storage to store any decent amount of tables, which again is expensive.
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Unfortunately, sometimes another method is required. Social Engineering, or attacking WPS, WEP etc. Related/unrelated TalkTalk's wi-fi hack advice is 'astonishing' 'They had been investigating the spread of a variant of the Mirai worm, which was causing several makes of routers to stop working properly. During tests of a TalkTalk model, the researchers discovered that the vulnerability exploited by the worm was also being abused to carry out a separate attack that forced the router to reveal its wi-fi password.' 'no risk to their personal information'.
I could show them a few risks! 'The risk is probably no higher than using a coffee shop's open wi-fi network.' Which I would never do, because the 'risk' of which they speak is actually much higher than people give credit for. To be fair though, the funniest thing about articles like this is that they come from the point-of-view that it's not easy to get someone's Wi-Fi password via other methods. Which 99.9% of the time, as the table above shows - it is.
Router Keygen is undoubtedly the best application for deciphering WiFi keys in Android. This powerful tool has just received a major update to version 3.5.0 which adds support for new routers, operating improvements and other developments. Beyond that all (or almost all) have a data plan on our devices, the WiFi connection is very valuable for all mobile users. Whenever we have the ability to connect to a WiFi network, we prefer the data connection because of its speed. Usually, however, networks have keys, but to access them exists Router Keygen, the best predictor of Thomson passwords either WEP or WPA. What is Router Keygen? Router Keygen is an application that can calculate routers passwords to decipher the WiFi keys encrypted with WEP / WPA.
For it this app offers three methods, the first being the fastest and the slowest last. Using a dictionary (default). It can be downloaded in the preferences menu. Using an existing Internet connection.
You can enable this feature in the preferences, is a little slower than the first method because it has to wait for the recovery of the keys. Native Calculation (backup by default). With this method even without a dictionary and Internet access will be able to calculate the keys.
However, this method is much slower than the others, because it can take up to 10 seconds on the Samsung Galaxy S2 or 2 minutes at low-end phones. News of Router Keygen 3.5.0. Added new OTE variations for Huawei routers and others.
Added a new color (yellow) meaning that there may be a possible support for the router. Improvements in Home and in memory consumption Which routers are compatible?
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