or you could use a program called CIA Commander, fits on a floppy .. boots straight into it from start up and gives you the user accounts and the option to change their passwords to whatever ...
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or you could use a program called CIA Commander, fits on a floppy .. boots straight into it from start up and gives you the user accounts and the option to change their passwords to whatever ...
Quote:
Originally posted here by DeadAddict
Give this program a try
http://home.eunet.no/~pnordahl/ntpasswd/
I would agree, as long as you have physical access to a system, this is a great tool for reseting the administrator or even a user password. I have tested this on many NT & 2K systems, I have been told it works on XP, but have never had the need to use it. Has anyone here verified its use on XP?Quote:
yes it works on XP, but has problems when you do not have a internal floppy drive, but one with usb, cause it tries to load the scsi drivers, but somehow it doesn't work.,
the earlier version had a problem with NTFS, but that problem is also solved with the latest version, GREAT PROGRAM!
Quote:
Originally posted here by Nokia
Hey Tedob, as far as I am aware, you can only give the spawned shell admin rights, if it is spwaned from an admin account. As in say you connected to the port nc is on, an admin would need to be logged into that computer for you to end up with an admin account other wise he would only be able to assign it to user group or something similar, if I am wrong could you tell me why as I have been experementing with this for about 6 weeks and havent found a way round it yet!
Thanks!
im under the impression that the shell is spawned as system just like the remote exploits shell is. i mean it is exploiting the authentication mechanism so it seems only logical. ive never had cause to try it. whos code are you using k-otiks and what exactly have you tried?
today i switched our t circuits from uunet to att and had to change everything that used the old IPs...god i never relialized...but tomorrow or the next day (i hope) ill dig out an un-patched machine and give it a go.
For my tests, the disk from http://home.eunet.no/~pnordahl/ntpasswd/ works fine in XP, but you will have the best luck if you use the "*" option to blank the password instead of changing in. Changing the password on XP does not always seem to work on my XP box but blanking always does.Quote:
Originally posted here by Info Tech Geek
I would agree, as long as you have physical access to a system, this is a great tool for reseting the administrator or even a user password. I have tested this on many NT & 2K systems, I have been told it works on XP, but have never had the need to use it. Has anyone here verified its use on XP?