Hwacha is a post-exploitation (credentials or keys obtained) tool that uses SSH to execute payloads or collect artifacts from one or multiple hosts at a time.
This commit fixes numerous CI build issues related to stale or broken
links. These include:
* Removal of Zoom username enumeration tool, covered by WPScan anyway.
* Removal of old Google dork database that is unmaintained/has vanished.
* Removal of `OSVDB.org` zone, which no longer resolves via DNS.
* Fix link to NoSQLmap tool (domain expired, use GitHub.com link now).
* Update link to Social Engineering in IT book from legacy URL.
* Update link to OWASP's AppSecUSA conference; now uses second-level domain.
Further, this commit simplifies the `.travis.yml` file in order to use a
plainer (more standard) certificates bundle. Two URLs have been added to
the whitelist: `www.shodan.io`, which returns a 403 Forbidden error when
accessed by Awesome Bot, and `www.mhprofessional.com`, which generates
an SSLv3 certificate validation error.
Prior to this commit, a custom SSL certificate bundle was generated and
then placed in the `/tmp` directory for use, but this is no longer
required as the latest `ca-certificates` bundle shipped with Ubuntu
contains the root certificates needed for the domains that once required
this custom bundle to be used.
This tool can connect to a domain over HTTP or SMTP, or search Certificate
Transparency (CT) logs in order to create a directed graph that
visualizes a domain's certificate's certificate alternative names. These
are other domain names that the certificate can be used to authenticate,
even if those domain names are not in public DNS records. Can be used as
an OSINT investigative tool as a task in the reconnaisance phase of a
pentesting engagement in order to easily discover additional targets.
This commit removes items from the Pentesting Report Template section
that are either not templates or have been removed from the source.
Further, line items are updated to use meaningful descriptions and to
follow the Awesome List style guides (capitalization and punctuation).
* SocialFish, a social media phishing framework.
* ShellPhish, a social media site cloner built on SocialFish.
* dos-over-tor, a torifid DoS and stress test tool.
* oregano, a MITM proxy that accepts direct Tor client requests.