dnstunnel.de— This is not really a new idea, but it's pretty cool anyway. Get onto a paid-for public hotspot and try it out. Almost any hotspot is now free to use.
Jul 25, 2007View in Crawl 4
Agreed. Why not just use a Verizon Wireless Broadband card? They get faster whenever cell towers are upgraded...and even now they aren't slow. I was downloading music at 80 KB/s while driving down the freeway. They're perfectly fine for travel...
This is a long way going about it, you will find they usually have one or two computers owned by the establishment that dont get routed back to there login paid page..... whip our your fav stumbling program (macstumbler for me) then in passive mode start scanning, "borrow" there mac address then spoof them ifconfig en0 ether a1:b2:c3:d4:e5:f6 =]...and if you REALLY want to steal some internerds just stumbler around and no doubt you will come access plenty of open access points!
So the legitimate use of a paid hotspot might involve a handful of dns queries (maybe 1-5) to get you to the portal... So the simplest countermeasure would be to limit the bandwidth available for DNS traffic (per client) to something unbearable... except if you are simply doing non nefarious dns lookups. 5 normal queries would be microscopic in comparison to tens of packets per second to transfer data. Lastly, thanks to digg this will become popular and many operators will clue in. Darn you diggers!!!! ;)
No problem, I think I can help you out with that one. Have a look at a URL:<a class="user" href="http://www.idontexist.com/somepage.html?key=value">http://www.idontexist.com/somepage.html?key=value</a>* No spaces* Case insensitive* No special charactersIf you want to send information like text and images as plain text, you need a way to convert them to a format that conforms to the requirements above. That's called encoding, and Base32 is an encoding method. You can take any text or image and convert it to an encoded string of letters and numbers. Base32 works well in this case because it just happens to be relatively compact, but doesn't contain any crazy characters.
gawtmilkJul 25, 2007
Agreed. Why not just use a Verizon Wireless Broadband card? They get faster whenever cell towers are upgraded...and even now they aren't slow. I was downloading music at 80 KB/s while driving down the freeway. They're perfectly fine for travel...
pyryJul 25, 2007
Did you use this? <a class="user" href="http://www.cs.uit.no/~daniels/PingTunnel/index.html">http://www.cs.uit.no/~daniels/PingTunnel/index.html</a>It's developed at Troms? simply because the network there allows you to ping anything, but you can't do anything else unless you're registered.
aseidlJul 26, 2007
Windows executables are on the OzymanDNS website - <a class="user" href="http://www.doxpara.com/?q=node/51">http://www.doxpara.com/?q=node/51</a>
bryanjkJul 26, 2007
$60 / month + $100+ USB Card
adz999Jul 26, 2007
This is a long way going about it, you will find they usually have one or two computers owned by the establishment that dont get routed back to there login paid page..... whip our your fav stumbling program (macstumbler for me) then in passive mode start scanning, "borrow" there mac address then spoof them ifconfig en0 ether a1:b2:c3:d4:e5:f6 =]...and if you REALLY want to steal some internerds just stumbler around and no doubt you will come access plenty of open access points!
nullroutenJul 26, 2007
So the legitimate use of a paid hotspot might involve a handful of dns queries (maybe 1-5) to get you to the portal... So the simplest countermeasure would be to limit the bandwidth available for DNS traffic (per client) to something unbearable... except if you are simply doing non nefarious dns lookups. 5 normal queries would be microscopic in comparison to tens of packets per second to transfer data. Lastly, thanks to digg this will become popular and many operators will clue in. Darn you diggers!!!! ;)
bradleylandJul 26, 2007
No problem, I think I can help you out with that one. Have a look at a URL:<a class="user" href="http://www.idontexist.com/somepage.html?key=value">http://www.idontexist.com/somepage.html?key=value</a>* No spaces* Case insensitive* No special charactersIf you want to send information like text and images as plain text, you need a way to convert them to a format that conforms to the requirements above. That's called encoding, and Base32 is an encoding method. You can take any text or image and convert it to an encoded string of letters and numbers. Base32 works well in this case because it just happens to be relatively compact, but doesn't contain any crazy characters.
Closed AccountJul 27, 2007
I'm sure that I didn't pull your talky string :P
ratsgOct 1, 2007
yes, that is what I am using for IP over ICMP.