I may be wrong but didn't we think omelet had passed away?
PLEASE trim.
> I may be wrong but didn't we think omelet had passed away?
Unfortunately not.
Sorry what do you mean exactly?
Snip the posted material from 'omlet' so it isn't propagated throughout
the thread. He doesn't need additional Google hits for his 'product'
or his antics.
David Fitzjarrell
Fine thanks David it's been a long week and my brain cell battery must
be on low.
> Ontruder PartII: The code:
>
and he doesn't know much about "C" either...
--
Nuno Souto
in sunny Sydney, Australia
wizo...@yahoo.com.au.nospam
>
> Now, follow the code for the example scot/tiger and
> happy crackin'
>
You really don't know much about C, do you? The code you posted
a number of times already is NOT a cracker routine. Trying to
impress the plebes, are we?
Worse than that. It was published by someone else back around
Oracle 8. He's trying to impress them with someone else's work
and doesn't even have the technical skill required to try it
and realize what it is.
--
Daniel A. Morgan
http://www.psoug.org
damo...@x.washington.edu
(replace x with u to respond)
And he claims to have worked for Oracle writing code for the server
releases. This simply proves he has lied about his past and his
knowledge. Of course we knew that almost a year ago.
David Fitzjarrell
> And he claims to have worked for Oracle writing code for the server
> releases. This simply proves he has lied about his past and his
> knowledge. Of course we knew that almost a year ago.
>
>
> David Fitzjarrell
Oh he may have worked for Oracle. There are lot of people in Redwood
Shores whose job it is to keep the grounds clean and the waste baskets
emptied.
How to link the code to Oracle libraries:
all the routines that start with kz* (ex kzsrdec)
are Oracle routines that are available with Oracle installations. For
example kzsrdec is the kernel zecurity decryption routine. Of course the
code is heavily dependent on the Oracle libraries.
Check the listings. Now for the first 100 visitors
to the omlet.org site; the jar file would contain a working copy of the
code along with about 10 millions of encrypted passwords!