All the user interaction is through the GUI
If you just want the third-party software, check out the installer
it's great for staging computers or seeing what's out there
Except in name and mental attitude towards its object, what are structural differences between a test and an attack?
Starlink beacons can readily observed with only Ku LNB's without any dishes.
I mean, perhaps some patterns used in organizing testing can be basis for organizing attacks
dark theme, a noob friendly walk through lol. scaling the size of the window doesn't scale the entire frame. sweep detector gave me some strange issue if i Rember. wasn't doing the correct frequencies. Maybe a step by step approach if wanted. so that you can go via each tool for the correct outcome?
https://hackaday.com/2022/09/23/snooping-on-starlink-with-an-rtl-sdr/
Snooping On Starlink With An RTL-SDR
With an ever-growing constellation of Starlink satellites whizzing around over our heads, you might be getting the urge to start experimenting with the high-speed internet service. But at $100 or more a month plus hardware, the barrier to entry is just a little daunting for a lot of us.
it looks like better packaing/installer is needed to break away from ubuntu, building on arch presently but it's.... complainy
I will release videos that show examples of how each tab is supposed to work. But if there is something you want it to do, it can usually be done.
I just have to know about it
What would you consider to be the "Hello World" of RFhacking with FISSURE?
If you're just getting started, there are a couple lessons on different topics. There are links to lessons that others have made.
When I do a demo, I usually pick a simple RF protocol like X10 or TPMS and use it show a general RF reverse engineering process
I liked that garage door opener demo myself.
That includes things like: monitoring, collection, replay, signal analysis, research, demodulation, injection
you can launch GNU Radio inspection flow graphs with GUIs for monitoring or use some other tool like QSpectrumAnalyzer with a hackrf_sweep
you can record right in the IQ Data tab and crop the files to isolate signals
You can play it back to see if it had effect
Hey Chris, have you posted any of your demos and if so where?
TPMS is something I-
Is there an equivalent drone denial of service/control application
Can you generate settings for GnuRadio filters etc?
Do you have a link to a video of you doing the TPMS (or X10) reverse engineering process you mentioned?
@salec I did get the installer to run on Arch, but it looks like it has a lot of hardcoded assumptions its on a deb system (sensible-browsers, gnome-terminal, ...)
Something I always wanted to tackle.* I don't know it got cut off. I'll have to try it out. Thanks.
https://www.ainfosec.com/technologies/fissure/
There's an old video from almost two years ago hereI don't like pointing people towards it because I need to make a newer video that covers all the new changes My github has a couple videos for some protocols
Thanks!
Then there's twitter where I'll post some short ones. Keep an eye out in the future for more comprehensive examples
So I have to decode a msk 2.4ghz signal. I have managed to pack and repack the bits via gnu radio. But cannot figure out exactly the bits of the data. I have now also sniffed the spi protocall, and slowly going over that. But it's slow going
Or I think it would be intersting to see how any tools are getting called under the hood, like a verbose mode
There isn't much incorporated yet surround drones. We've done a lot of work in the past and there are some tools that probably shouldn't be released. But you can do generic jamming, use gr-ieee802-11 for 5 MHz Wi-Fi, someone out there has been reversing ocusync2
Msk decoding seems to not be included in alot of packages that I can find
Thought. Passive radar. Array of receivers with direction finding. Detecting presence of signals, from actively emitted packets to noise from motor drivers or dc-dc converters. Plotting presence of devices in the area.
@Thomas Shaddack try it with microphones first - passive sonar
direction finding, tracking, visualization are all things that fit but may need help to get fully integrated
OK, that was a quick hour! Lots of good questions, hope everyone got a chance to chip in. I want to thank Chris for his time today, and everyone else too for participating. Great chat everyone! Feel free to keep the chat going, of course -- the Hack Chat channel is always open!
Thanks everybody!
Thanks Chris!
Thanks Chris!
Thanks Chris, thanks Dan!
Discussions
Become a Hackaday.io Member
Create an account to leave a comment. Already have an account? Log In.