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Welcome to Dark Tech. Here we show computer users how to protect themselves against getting hacked, identity theft, securing networks and many other ideas using the best and FREE software available. Dark Tech is for the hardcore techie or the novice that wants to expand their abilities into the dark side of tech. The only way to protect yourself is to learn the tricks of the trade. This software should not be used for illegal activities.
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ERASER. Make sure there's no signs of your data on your hard drive.
Why do you want to destroy your data in the first place?
- To protect your privacy.
- To prevent others from seeing sensitive data.
- To cover your tracks in case you're performing confidential activities on your computer.
When it comes to wiping out data, forget about the Recycle Bin, stupid shareware utilities, or fun little free files. I'll show you hard-core software leaves no trace of the data (or makes the data practically impossible to use).
Software solutions
Software-based data destruction is perfect for most people to use on hard drives or floppy disks. If you have financial records, business secrets, or other sensitive material, use one of the methods below.
- Eraser
This open source application, perfect for deleting individual files, surpasses Department of Defense data deletion specifications.

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Jap makes it possible to surf the internet anonymously and unobservably.
Without Anonymization, every computer in the internet communicates using a traceable Address. That means:
- the website visited,
- the internet service provider (ISP),
- and any eavesdropper on the internet connection
can determine which websites the user of a specific computer visits. Even the information which the user calls up can be intercepted and seen if encryption is not used. JAP uses a single static address which is shared by many JAP users. That way neither the visited website, nor an eavesdropper can determine which user visited which website.

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AirSnort is a wireless LAN (WLAN) tool which recovers encryption keys. AirSnort operates by passively monitoring transmissions, computing the encryption key when enough packets have been gathered.
802.11b, using the Wired Equivalent Protocol (WEP), is crippled with numerous security flaws. Most damning of these is the weakness described in " Weaknesses in the Key Scheduling Algorithm of RC4 " by Scott Fluhrer, Itsik Mantin and Adi Shamir. Adam Stubblefield was the first to implement this attack, but he has not made his software public. AirSnort, along with WEPCrack, which was released about the same time as AirSnort, are the first publicly available implementaions of this attack.
AirSnort requires approximately 5-10 million encrypted packets to be gathered. Once enough packets have been gathered, AirSnort can guess the encryption password in under a second.

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