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The Author/Blogger shall hold no liability for special, incidental, or consequential damages arising out of or resulting from the use/misuse of the information in this Blog. It is strictly mentioned that these are all for learning and awareness purpose. Most of the articles are collected from various sources and many of them are blogger's own which meant for helping people who are interested in security system or beginners help for security systems and various IT purposes. Some of the articles are solely intended for IT Professionals and systems administrators with experience servicing computer. It is not intended for home users, hackers, or computer thieves attempting to crack PC. Please do not attempt any of these procedures if you are unfamiliar with computer hardware, software and please use this information responsibly. Binod Narayan Sethi is not responsible for the use or misuse of these material, including loss of data, damage to hardware or personal injury. Information can help you to catch hackers and crackers and other cyber criminals. Information can help you to detect and manipulate the evil motives of these anti social intellectual peoples. Good use of the information protect you from evils and misuse of the information make you evil/criminal. Author of this site will not be responsible for use of material for any illicit mean or illicit act done by anybody in any means.

Binod Narayan Sethi

Binod Narayan Sethi
Programming,Web Development & Graphic Designing are my Hobbies.

Sunday, July 11, 2010

HOW TO BREAK XP PASSWORD

A Loophole u never knew about

This works on WIn 2000 & WIN XP.

This can be used to gain access to the website you want to for free, and how you can gain access to 'control panel', and the various other tools of Widows that may have been blocked from your grasp like 'regedit' by the administrator. IT can be used in schools & colleges..
When u are at the log on screen, type in your username and password. NOW When you hit enter, and it comes up with the next screen, the rectangle one, immediatly pull out the network cable i.e. the cable wire.
Now u can log on without any restrictions because when the cable is pulled off then it does not download any settings from the server. Now you have access to control panel, & all the other features which had been blocked BUT there will be no network access. But that's cool because now we can access 'Internet options', click in the connections tab click the LAN settings, click the proxy settings, and in the little white box at the bottom we can specify websites that bypass the proxy server (eg www.yahoo.com) Now once you have changed the settings to what you wish, apply them and restart the computer. Now get someone else to log onto it because if you log in it will load the cached settings from your previous log in, then after the other person logs in, everyone that logs in after them included themselves will have the internet settings you specified.

Its only an 'Unplugging technique' to gain access to a comp. locked by the administrator.
Now you can gain access to msconfig, regedit, command etc disable the virus scanner, or to install a trojan or a virus according to u're will..
XP HOME ADVANCED FILE PERMISSIONS.!!
Access *Advance file Permissions* on NTFS file systems for XP Home simply by booting into *Safe Mode*, rt-clicking any file or folder, and navigating to the *Security tab*. This gives the user the ability to allow or deny read, write, execute, read & write, display contents, full-control, iheritance, and take ownership permissions, with many more options available to apply to different users and groups stored on the computer. Well, you don't have to do this in *Safe Mode* (XP Home). Although it is a little less intuitive, you can simply go to your command prompt - Start>All Programs>Accessories>Command Prompt. Now type cacls in the window (without the quotes). This gives you the ability to add, remove or modify file permissions on files and folders through the command prompt. Type cacls /? for help on different options and variables. You do not need to be in safe mode to use this so it makes it a little quicker than using the safe mode security tab GUI.

Remember - this only applies to NTFS. Here also is a very useful link to find a lot of extras and tweaks straight from the horse's mouth - the Microsoft Resource Center. You will find a lot of very useful web-based extra's here, most of them left unknowing to the general public - such as, "Online Crash Analysis" - a site that looks like Windows Update but you can upload your crash "dump logs" (when you get those system or application crash error reports). Microsoft will then analyze the log file and tell you some more info about WHY the system crashed (ie. faulty hardware/software/conflicts, etc).

Binod Narayan Sethi

Binod Narayan Sethi
Binod Narayan Sethi

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