I have uploaded a test mission on the Alpha 0.2 server. You won't be able to use the mission center to access it, only the intel below. If you want to give it a shot, it is a hard one. I strongly advise the use of multi-tasking attacks. This means multiple terminals in various workspace running at the same time so you can cover more ground. --------- Mission difficulty: HARD Availability: NOW BRIEFING: We have intercepted a suspicious email between Dr. Nathaniel and a third party. Initial research revealed that Unity7 own a reserved IP block from their ISP. Execute a network recon and report any useful information. OBJECTIVES: [VERY HARD] - What is the port and the technology used by Unity7 for their SSH services [HARD] - What is the model of their IP WebCam Access StingerOS Alpha 0.2 to start your mission now. Good luck!
Indeed, you don't have any domain name provided, so you will have to find one. Try to explore the IP block Unity7 has bought. In real life, search engine can catch the IP and the Domain when indexing a site. Also, you can even query Bing to reveal all the domain name hosted on the same IP. The same logic apply here. Don't forget to multibox your attack. It will be much more fun that way.
Found the webcam model. Working on the ssh (edit: solved ). Some for i ... loop would be nice as well!
Can I ask for a bit of help here please. I have the camera details, but I can't locate the SSH services. I know the IP of the mainframe, and the domain of the webserver but I can't find any other port on the mainframe that help me locate the SSH server. I've guessed at the name and the default SSH port, but that failed. I wen back to the rosenbergclinic webmail and brute forced the password, but that hasn't helped me. Stuck - please help.
Hello, I'm stuck in this mission. Spoiler I have found unity7network.com, but i have use sfuzer and osintscan in that web, and i have found nothing... Any help please?
I honestly don't know how to search the IP block, so that I can find the IP Camera, or domain name or whatever it is I'm looking for. Edit: Thanks to the help of fellow agents, I now know how to do it.
right now, the way to look through an IP-block, is siply tackling each ip, one by one. you can use portscan and osintscan for this, depending on what you are looking for