Life would have been very boring without computers.....
But oh! who cares if we have when....just stop thinking and hang on for hours
BackTrack 5 download
BACKTRACK 5 Free Download
BackTrack is a well-known specialized Linux distribution focusing on
security tools for penetration testers and security professionals, but
it now offers a lot in terms of forensics…
Pros: BackTrack 5 has all the tools you need for testing network security and its nicely presented Cons: Documentation is scarce and often outdated & upgrading from previous release isn’t supported Backtrack homepage
The advantage of BackTrack 5 (BT5) is that it offers a slew of
security and forensic tools on a live DVD, ready to use. It’s based on
Ubuntu Lucid (10.04 LTS) with Linux kernel 2.6.38 and some patched WiFi
drivers to allow injection attacks. You can download the distribution in
a GNOME or a KDE version, for 32-bit or 64-bit x86 machines. It’s a
live DVD ISO file, which you can burn to a DVD or write to a USB stick.
On the desktop of the live session, there’s an installer icon if you
want to install BackTrack permanently. For the first time, the project
also has an image for ARM, which you can run on your smartphone or
tablet to test the security of a wireless network.
BackTrack 5 allows you to boot into a stealth or a forensics mode
BackTrack’s boot menu gives you various options. The default option
just starts a live session (a stylish framebuffer console, in which you
can start GNOME or KDE with startx), but there’s also a stealth mode
which boots the distribution without generating any network traffic: you
have to enable networking manually later. This is interesting if you
want to hide your presence on the network temporarily. Another nice
option is the forensics mode, which doesn’t automatically mount the
computer’s drives and also doesn’t use any swap space it finds. When
forensically investigating a system, this guarantees that you don’t
accidentally wipe out hidden traces.
BackTrack organizes all tools in various menus
BackTrack is filled with a collection of more than 300 open source
security tools, which you can find organized in different submenus of
the “Backtrack” menu: “Information Gathering”, “Vulnerability
Assessment”, “Exploitation Tools”, “Privilege Escalation”, “Maintaining
Access”, “Reverse Engineering”, “RFID Tools”, “Stress Testing”,
“Forensics”, “Reporting Tools”, “Services”, and “Miscellaneous”. Each
submenu is further subdivided into subcategories. The developers have
added a nice touch to menu items of commandline utilities: when you
click on such a menu item, it opens a terminal window with the tool
showing its usage, e.g. with the –help option. download
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