Google Hacking for Penetration Testers
According to its cover, Johnny Long's book focuses primarily on revealing the "Dark Side" of Google -- a promise it delivers in spades. But I can also heartily recommend Google Hacking to newbies who simply want to learn how to harness Google's full potential.
The first few chapters of the book walk you through Google's interfaces and features, then introduce you to Google's advanced operators and techniques you can use to refine your Google searches. Instead of submitting basic searches that leave you arduously parsing hundreds of results for your desired answer, you quickly learn to submit powerful queries that almost instantly yield the results you intend. Even as an experienced Google user, I learned a lot from Google Hacking's early chapters. For Google neophytes, this alone makes the book worth its price.
However, we all know Slashdotters really want this book in order to learn how hackers misuse Google. Well, you won't be disappointed. As soon as Long has taught you to submit advanced queries, he wastes no time in showing you the techniques l33t Google hax0rs use to exploit the search engine's power. For example, did you know you can use Google as a free proxy server? By submitting a specially-crafted, English-to-English translation query, you can capitalize on Google's translation service to anonymously submit all your Web requests. This simple hack just scratches the surface of Google's malicious potential.
Most Web surfers don't realize the sheer amount of extremely sensitive information available for the harvesting on the Internet. In that sense, Google Hacking is eye-popping. Do you want to find misconfigured Web servers that publicly list their directory contents? A quick Google search does the trick. Or, suppose you found some new exploit code that only works against a particular version of IIS 5.0. Submit a quick Google query for a helpful list of possible targets. Do you want to harvest user logins, passwords (for example, mySQL passwords in a connect.inc file), credit card numbers, social security numbers or any other potentially damaging tidbit that Web users and administrators accidentally leak onto the Internet? Google Hacking shows you how, with highly refined searches gleaned from the community contributing to the Google Hacking database (GHDB) found on Long's Web site.
While Long's book discloses these and many other potentially malicious Google searching techniques, it does so responsibly, with the goal of prevention in mind. Only the less damaging search strings are fully revealed. Long saves the juicier (read: more dangerous) hacks for your own discovery. Long even obfuscates the sensitive results of the more damaging search strings in order to protect the innocent incompetents he refers to as "googledorks." After showing you how hackers subvert Google to their malicious intent, Long dedicates a chapter to how Web administrators can configure their Web servers securely in order to prevent sensitive data from making it into a Google Hacker's clutches.
Though I've gushed about the book so far, I will quibble with its inconsistent tone. Some of its chapters target readers having different levels of technical understanding. While the book starts out in a voice easy enough for even the most novice user to understand, some of the later chapters, on topics such as document grinding, database digging, and query automation, jump drastically and use language and techniques that only programmers or Unix power-users would understand. In addition, the humor that made Johnny's live presentation so memorable shows up in his book, but in scant supply; frankly, more jokes would be welcome.
But these negatives are mere nits. Whether you're a penetration tester wanting to exploit Google, a Web administrator wanting to protect yourself from information leaks, or even a newbie wanting to harness Google's full potential, Google Hacking for Penetration Testers makes an excellent resource. If you, too, use Google as a second brain, pick up Johnny Long's book and learn how to exploit this powerful search engine to its full capacity.
Corey Nachreiner, Network Security Analyst for WatchGuard's LiveSecurity Service, writes about network security on the free RSS news feed, WatchGuard Wire (browsable version, RSS feed.) You can purchase Google Hacking for Penetration Testers from bn.com. Slashdot welcomes readers' book reviews -- to see your own review here, read the book review guidelines, then visit the submission page.
Personally I've been using his site for a while now. It is great site with user submitted hacks and a community review. It really is amazing what is on Google and knew a book was coming to exploit it.
Besides being able to find sensitive files, hidden portals, and vulnerable servers, it is also a good way to get free porn.
The exploits are just really advanced searches like the one below.
"http://*:*@www"bangbus
I'm a virgo and on Slashdot. Coincidence? Yes.
With a name like that, he should be!
Penetration testing?
In that sense, Google Hacking is eye-popping
That's what she said!
</rimshot>
concrete5: a cms made for marketing, but strong enough for geeks.
Yes, you are not alone. Many, amd more especially here at slashdot think [and believe] they know more than they actually do!
Which is why author linked to Snopes...
Instead of submitting basic searches that leave you arduously parsing hundreds of results for your desired answer
Dude, stop searching for porn. I usually feel really lucky if my search produces more than a single page of results.
One of the first links I checked out from the google results he lists is apparantly some ddos perpetrator's weapons list page.
Go Figure.
You are checking your backups, aren't you?
Here is a cool article on Hackaday that describes GeoCamming, another Google exploit.
I like to find interesting cameras and then use NeoTrace to trace the addresses to find out exactly where the camera is. It's quite fun.
Amazon link to the book since the site's slashdotted
My roommate is dating a penetration tester from my work. You should have seen the look on her face when he told her what he does for a living.
How did someone come up with this name for a profession anyways?
Seems like Google itself isn't immune to hacking either ...
Too bad Google doesn't translate graphics, which some web pages are full of.
-- Boycott Shell
We all know that a male geek's second brain most certainly isn't Google (unless that is a clever nick name he bestowed upon it). I can just imagine wil wheaton shuddering at being linked to this thought as well as all the spam geared towards "natural google enhancement".
"It's difficult to meditate on amphetamines." - Joe Walsh
What I really want to see abused is AskJeeves. That smarmy little morpion really bugs me for some reason.
My new dream job!
Sounds more like a cheesy pickup line to me: "Excuse me Miss, I'm Mr. Jones with the Office of Penetration Testing. You've been scheduled for a security checkup."
... does Google have Double penetration ! In vogue
I've been fortunate to live and work in the same area as Johnny Long, and have heard him locally a couple of times. The most memorable was when he was a guest speaker at a security class while I was working on my masters degree. His demo on pen testing was great. If you ever get the chance, listen to him speak.
I'd imagine his book is just as lively, informative, and insightful. I'm buying to when I get home. I've had it in my saved list for a while now.
Be interesting if Google used their spare/idle servers for SETI@Home or something.
Assume I was drunk when I posted this.
It would be surprising if leakage.apache.org were on the list. But leakage.org is just a random site in Malaysia.
Considering how male dominated the computer field is, I'd say they'd be mostly dudes. I'll take a pass on this job.
oh crap, now i feel like a dumbass.
If you don't know what AltaVista is (was), get off my lawn.
ah man, now all those passwords are dead.
Rosco: "If brains were gunpowder, Enos couldn't blow his nose."
Correct me if I'm wrong, but Google doesn't do anything to the image references -- so that if you want to anonymously browse a website through Google, wouldn't you also have to turn image loading off on your browser? I mean, sure it'll work for text, but I didn't think this was exactly uncommon knowledge?
Also, I don't think Google translates the hyperlinks to work within the translation-page does it? So you would have to copy out any URL's that you wanted to go to and re-enter them into your translation query.
Can someone please tell me what's so special about this l33t "specially formed English-to-English translation" method? I mean, how much better can it be than just typing in the URL you want and choosing "Korean to English" in the drop-down?
*** WARNING ***
When doing a google translation proxy, remember two things:
1) The images that you load from the target page do *not* use the proxy. So if they want to track you down, all they have to do is look for the next few image loads following the google load for the main page.
2) en|en translations stand out in the logs, since it's not a normal translation option. You should use (for example) de|en. It'll fail on every german word and show the original word, which is english.
The register had a mirrored article from security focus. It walks you through the basic idea behind the book.
I wonder if soon government will "wiretap" google
What makes you think they haven't already?
You need to use "Google hacking" to find free porn? I know a lot of hacking techniques for all kinds of things, but I can't remember the last time I had to use any of them to find more free porn than I can possibly look at in a hundred lifetimes.
These hacks are just the beginning and i can't wait to see how far Google will allow such queries to go on. I probably think that Google will limit special or *hacking technique queries search anytime soon, if not expect big brother or corporate giants to interfere with search engines and take actions against these small but powerful methods of hacking thru 'search engines'.