How Hackers Can Steal Credentials Stored In Browsers Using A USB Rubber Ducky

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Windows 10 & Firefox Leave Account Passwords Vulnerable
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Cyber Weapons Lab, Episode 082 (Recut - Partial Episode)

Web browsers like Firefox make it very easy to access one's various account credentials as it saves them for you in a list easily reached from the application's preferences. Unfortunately, Firefox doesn't securely encrypt these site usernames and passwords, leaving them vulnerable to anyone with the know-how to access them.

On today's episode of Cyber Weapons Lab, we'll show you how a hacker or pentester could create a USB Rubber Ducky script with a sneaky payload for Windows 10 that takes a snapshot of a target's password list in Firefox, and then sends it back to them via email.

USB Rubber Ducky available on:

Amazon: https://amzn.to/38UaGaT
Hak5 Shop: https://shop.hak5.org/products/usb-ru...

Other useful things you might need:

microSD cards: https://amzn.to/38VKAEg
SD card adapter: https://amzn.to/37kSaYi
SD card reader: https://amzn.to/2HdYjuT

To learn more, check out the article and more in-depth video on our website: https://nulb.app/z4jka

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How Hackers Can Steal Credentials Stored In Browsers Using A USB Rubber Ducky How Hackers Can Steal Credentials Stored In Browsers Using A USB Rubber Ducky Reviewed by Anonymous on March 16, 2020 Rating: 5