Bugs in Trillian Password Recovery

July 12th, 2008

We have previously reported some bugs in our FileZilla Password Decoder.

I wanted to let our users know that we’re also working on fixing the bugs in Trillian password recovery tool. We have received numerous bug reports on this program and will put a priority on this bugfix release.

Here’s a list of things we want to fix:

  • The passwords from new versions of Trillian (3, Astra & Pro) are not recovered. Partly due to the fact that current password location search is not sophisticated enough
  • Small buffer - we have received reports about the current version of decrypter not showing all passwords due to low variable size
  • Missing characters in passwords. The decryption algorithm is limited in the range of characters that it understands

Links:

How to find Facebook passwords from Social.im

July 7th, 2008

This post is about:

  • Decrypt social.im password (Facebook password decrypter)
  • Decode social.im passwords (Facebook password decoder)
  • Crack social . im passwords (Facebook password cracker)
  • Recover social.im password (Facebook password recovery)
  • Find social.im Messenger passwords (Facebook Mpassword finder)
  • Facebook password ripper (rip social.im passwords)
  • Facebook password hacker (hack social.im password)
  • Facebook password stealer (steal social.im password)

Facebook IM team has released their version of IM client some time early this year. Unofficial sources say that as much as up to 20% of on-line Facebook users are also logged into social.im (although I doubt the share is more than 10% since the IM is still in the beta stages).

For those of us that ever wanted to recover forgotten Facebook password that is saved in the browser and social.im client, there is bad news though -

  •  The browser is not likely to keep the saved password. Instead the cookie is saved on the system that tells Facebook that user does not want the password to be entered each time.
    There is no way to recover the password from that session cookie.
  • Some IMs store the saved password locally in some sort of encrypted or clear-text form. Just like with Yahoo Messenger, the social.im password is not stored locally. Social.im sends the password to the server during the first login. The server returns a string called AuthKey which is then used by social.im to authenticate at consequent times.
    There is no way to find out which algorithm is used to translate the password into AuthKey (unless this info gets leaked from the social.im team or someone takes a guess that turns out to be correct).

The above reasons mean that there is no easy way of recovering Facebook password using the information saved on the local system.

Update: Looks like encrypted AuthKey is encoded using base64 format (to be able to store this authentication key in the ASCII form).

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YouTube annotations and Video Indexing

June 27th, 2008

Real purpose of YouTube annotations gets unnoticed as people dive into “birth of Long-Form video” discussions

There is quite a bit of noise in the blogspace about the recently-released YouTube Annotations feature and how it can be used to overcome the 10-minute video limitation on YouTube. You split the long episode into 10 minute parts and link them using the annotation at the end of each clip with the URL assigned to the annotation. Google Operating System blog was one of the first to comment on the news, CamcorderInfo has written about it and did again discuss the Long-Form trend, Search Engine Roundtable did a post and so did a few others.

What I feel has been missed is the real reason why Google added this feature to their popular video hosting service.

So far Computer Vision specialists from all around the world have been tackling the recognition, tagging and ranking problem for the videos. We know how to index and rank text-based information, but how do we do the same for videos, sounds, images?
At the moment factors that influence search rank of the videos are mostly based on the information outside the video, e.g. video tags, video title, video filename, text surrounding the video, text of the links to the video and user rating. Theoretically, a totally irrelevant video can have a high ranking in the search results if the information surrounding the video is relevant to the searched subject.

It makes sense to think that the Annotation feature added to YouTube is one of the intermediate steps taken by Google in order to understand the videos much better, provide higher quality ranking and reduce spamming with irrelevant content (questionable as knowing this the spammer could use annotations to fool the system). Unlike the video title, surrounding text and text of the links, the Annotations are part of the video and enable Google to better understand what exactly is being shown in the video.

Few people commented that annotations offered by YouTube lack any style and are not editable by viewers. Of course they could do a much prettier text overlay in any video editing program but that information won’t make it to the index and hence won’t make any contribution to the search ranking of this video.

So think about it twice before you go off to render the annotations in your favorite video editor! Besides, I am sure Google will add some sort of style editing and viewer annotations in the future releases. You will be able to go back and spice up your previous work at that stage.

Update, 1 Sept 2008: you should use the new captions feature to add subtitles.
The rest of the post still holds true - the right combination of captions, annotations, metadata and of course clear speech will help Google to index your videos much better.

Links on the Annotation feature:

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Video about recovering Windows Live Passwords

February 27th, 2008

We’re making a series of How-To videos that will be demonstrating how our tools work and how you could use them to solve your problems.

The first one was deliberately called with a provocative name, Download Windows Live Password Stealer.

Windows Live Password Recovery is the tool that will instantly find, decrypt & recover Windows Live passwords that were saved by Windows Live Messenger on your PC under the current login. This decoder will recover multiple accounts and supports all known versions of Windows Live Messenger including Messenger Beta, MSN Messenger and Windows Messenger. Works also on Windows Vista. This cracker works when the “Remember My Password” checkbox is ticked in Windows Live Messenger and you are able to login automatically without entering your password. Even if you have un-installed Windows Live Messenger there is still a chance that your password is saved on your PC.

Related links:

FileZilla Password Recovery - not bugfree!

February 12th, 2008

Thanks to our dear users, we have identified two issues with the FileZilla Password Recovery:

  1. Passwords can be recovered from FileZilla v2.x from both registry and xml files but FileZilla 3.x passwords are not recovered
  2. Size of one of the variables that holds the data internally is not large enough. As a result when you have many sites saved in the Connection Manager some of these sites will not be shown.

In the next couple of weeks we’ll re-write our FileZilla password decryption tool and release a new version with these and other tiny bugs removed.

Gmail Password Recovery - St.Valentines update

February 10th, 2008

We’re happy to release a major update that indeed makes the program the best of its’ kind in terms of recovering your Google passwords. If a Google password is saved on your PC by one of the applications that use Google services the program will find and show this password.

What’s been added:

  • Support for Google Desktop password decryption (CryptProtectData algorithm is used to store the encrypted password)
  • Support for Google Photos Screensaver password decoding (Google Picasa Screensaver) (CryptProtectData algorithm is used to store the encrypted password)
  • Support for decoding passwords from various Firefox extensions that use Google accounts: Gmail Manager passwords, Gmail Checker passwords, Webmail Notifier passwords, Gspace passwords & Gmail Notifier passwords (not to be confused with a stand-alone Gmail Notifier application that is supported already)

Fixes:

  • Decryption algorithm now supports Firefox 2.x.
  • During an upgrade from Firefox 1.x to Forefox 2.x sometimes signons2.txt file is added without migrating the data from signons.txt. In that case signons.txt is left without usage on your PC and you don’t even suspect your old data is still there (Firefox shows only signons2.txt if it exists). Gmail Password Recovery shows passwords from both signons.txt and signons2.txt

Let us know if you’re running a blog and wish to review the new version. We’ll give you a code for the review.
Links:

Gmail Password Recovery - still room to go!

January 20th, 2008

Although we state that our Gmail Password Recovery is possibly the best tool on the net to recover any Gmail passwords stored on the system, the tool could have been even better.

As part of our continuous testing cycle to make sure our tools support the latest releases of the programs we have discovered some bugs and features that could be nice to have fixed in the new versions of Gmail Password Recovery:

  • The Firefox password recovery does not work on the recent Firefox version 2 and above.
  • It would be great to have the Gmail Password Recovery supporting Firefox Gmail-related Add-ons such as support for:
    • Gmail Manager passwords
    • Gmail Checker passwords
    • Gmail Notifier passwords (not to be confused with a stand-alone Gmail Notifier application that is supported already)
    • Gspace passwords (uses Gmail as a remote storage space)
    • Webmail Notifier passwords
  • Support for Google Desktop passwords
  • Support for Google Screensaver passwords (access to Picasa web albums)

We’ll be releasing new versions to cover the fixes described above in the coming weeks, so watch out for updates!

Links:

AIM 6.8 Beta and AIM Password Recovery compatible, Real-Time IM

January 12th, 2008

AIM is jumping in versions from 6.5 directly to 6.8 despite having only one more-or-less significant change (Real-Time IM).

Just a short post to say that AIM Password Recovery has been tested under the new Beta AIM 6.8 that was released yesterday. Happy to say that decryption went fine. The algorithms didn’t change. Thanks AOL team!

Links:

New release: Paltalk Password Recovery

January 11th, 2008

Paltalk Password Recovery will find encrypted Paltalk, PaltalkScene & SuperIM passwords, decode them and decrypt them with a click of a button. The correct passwords are recovered automatically if they are saved on the local system and you are able to login with Paltalk automatically without having to manually enter the password. All versions of Paltalk are supported including Paltalk Scene, Basic, Plus, Extreme, Deluxe, Premium, PalPlus and SuperIM. Passwords from multiple profiles can be recovered as well as passwords from the ICQ, AIM and Yahoo Messenger that are stored by Paltalk.

Paltalk Password Recovery

As usual with all our releases we’ve done very thorough testing on many system configurations. Testing environments included Windows XP & Windows Vista; Paltalk version 8.5 (recommended for Win 95/98/ME), Paltalk 9.1 and the late PaltalkScene 9.2. We’ve also tested to make sure Paltalk decrypter works for multiple Paltalk user accounts and decodes AIM Passwords, ICQ Passwords and Yahoo Messenger passwords stored by Paltalk.

Links:

  1. Paltalk Password Recovery homepage
  2. Download Paltalk Password Recovery
  3. Paltalk homepage

On a lightnote: I have never seen so many names and name iterations for one program! Below are the names I discovered were used to reference Paltalk on the official Paltalk site:

  • Paltalk (trademarked)
  • SuperIM (trademarked)
  • PalPlus
  • Paltalk Messenger
  • PaltalkScene
  • Paltalk Scene Basic
  • Paltalk Scene Plus (also known as Deluxe)
  • Paltalk Scene Extreme (also known as Premium)
  • Paltalk Deluxe
  • Paltalk Premium

I don’t like that. Software needs to be built consistently. Not just the internals. Many names impose crippled marketing.

Google Talk Password Recovery in the news

December 25th, 2007

Merry Christmas to you all!

Just wanted to say thanks to these guys who have announced the new version of Google Talk Password Recovery in their blogs:

There has been a substantial amount of downloads from these sites. Thanks a lot chaps!

Original GTalk Password Recovery description:
Google Talk Password Recovery is a utility for finding and decrypting Google Talk, GMail and Picasa passwords that are stored on your computer with a click of a button! This password decoder works when “Remember Password” checkbox is ticked in GTalk instant messenger. Passwords from multiple profiles can be recovered, all versions of Google Talk are supported. This password decoder will also find a saved password from Gmail Notifier & Picasa. Google services passwords from Firefox and Internet Explorer are recovered too. This is possibly the best password decrypter for Google passwords that you can find on the internet!

Links: