The cDc has released several tools, for both hackers/
system administrators and for the general public. Many of these are related to
computer security and are sometimes dubbed "hacker tools".
The Automated Prayer Project The Automated Prayer Project, written by Javaman, is "a
VT420 connected to a
Sun Ultra5 via a
serial cable which displays the output of a continuously running program. The signaling rate is limited to 9600
baud. The program itself cycles through the
Rosary, displaying a new individual prayer once every thirty seconds. Each individual prayer is then sent out via
UDP to a random machine on the Internet on a random port."
Back Orifice Back Orifice (often shortened to
BO) is a
computer program designed for remote system administration. It enables a user to control a computer running
Microsoft Windows operating system from a remote location. The name is a
pun on
Microsoft BackOffice Server software. The program debuted at
DEF CON 6 on August 1, 1998. It was the brainchild of
Sir Dystic. According to the group, its purpose was to demonstrate the lack of security in Microsoft's operating system Windows 98.
Back Orifice 2000 Back Orifice 2000 (often shortened to
BO2k) is a computer program that is similar in function to Back Orifice. Back Orifice 2000 debuted on July 10, 1999 at DEF CON 7. The original code was written by
Dildog. Whereas the original Back Orifice was limited to the
Windows 95 and
Windows 98 operating systems, BO2k also supports
Windows NT,
Windows XP and
Windows 2000. Some BO2k client functionality has also been implemented for *nix-systems. In addition, BO2k was released under the
GPL. As of 2012, BO2k is being actively developed.
Camera/Shy Camera/Shy, originally called Peek-a-Booty, was the first Hacktivismo project released. It debuted in 2002 at the
H.O.P.E. 2k2 convention in
New York City. It is a
steganographic tool that scans for and delivers decrypted content directly from the world wide web.
NBName NBName is a computer program that can be used to carry out
denial-of-service attacks that can disable
NetBIOS services on Windows machines. It was written by
Sir Dystic and released July 29, 2000 at the DEF CON 8 convention in Las Vegas.
ScatterChat ScatterChat is an encrypted
instant messaging client based on
Gaim. It was written by J. Salvatore Testa II and released at the H.O.P.E. Number Six conference in New York City on July 22, 2006. It provides
encryption as well as integrated
onion routing with
Tor, and secure file transfers. Various flaws in the software have been elaborated by researchers.
The Six/Four System The Six/Four System is a
censorship-resistant
network proxy written by
Mixter, a member of both cDc and Hacktivismo. It works by using "trusted peers" to relay network connections over SSL encrypted links. Hacktivismo and the cDc further gained notoriety in 2003 when the Six/Four System became the first product of a hacker group to receive approval from the
United States Department of Commerce for export of strong encryption.
SMBRelay and SMBRelay2 SMBRelay and
SMBRelay2 are computer programs that can be used to carry out
SMB man-in-the-middle attacks on Windows machines. They were written by
Sir Dystic and released March 21, 2001 at the @lantacon convention in
Atlanta, Georgia.
Torpark XeroBank Browser (formerly known as
Torpark) is a variant of the
Portable Firefox web browser with
Tor built into it. Torpark is intended for use on
portable media such as a
USB flash drive but it can also be used on any
hard disk drive. cDc/Hacktivismo co-released v.1.5.0.7 along with Steve Topletz on September 19, 2006.
Veilid Veilid is a peer-to-peer network and application framework, described as "like
Tor, but for apps". It was released on August 11, 2023 at
DEF CON 31 in Las Vegas.
Whisker Whisker is a project authored by Rain Forest Puppy that is no longer in development. It checked for thousands of known security vulnerabilities in web servers. Whisker Version 1.4 was co-released by the cDc at DEF CON 8 in 2000. == See also ==