Elcomsoft Phone Password Breaker Professional V6.11 Password Cracker

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Amancio Mccrae

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Apr 27, 2024, 5:45:17 AM4/27/24
to ponromoha

Elcomsoft Phone Breaker enables forensic access to password-protected backups for smartphones and portable devices based on the Apple iOS platform. The password recovery tool supports all Apple devices running all versions of iOS including the iPhone, iPad and iPod Touch devices of all generations released to date.

Up to 40% of support calls are related to forgotten passwords and locked logins. Elcomsoft System Recovery helps instantly reset Windows system passwords, enabling system administrators regain access to locked Windows accounts. Supporting local Windows accounts, network domains and Microsoft Account, Elcomsoft System Recovery is a must-have tool for network administrators, IT professionals and security specialists.

Elcomsoft Phone Password Breaker Professional v6.11 Password Cracker


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Extract critical evidence from Apple iOS devices in real time. Gain access to phone secrets including passwords and encryption keys, and decrypt the file system image with or without the original passcode. Physical and logical acquisition options for all 64-bit devices running all versions of iOS.

The password would become the property of the i-device and not the PC (or the copy of iTunes) that was used to set the password. You could connect your phone to a different computer and make a local backup with a freshly installed copy of iTunes, and that backup would still be protected with the password you set a long time ago.

However, these tools can not only be used for criminal purposes or to find out the identity of other people, you can also use them for your own protection or for emergencies. Password crackers, for example, are often the last resort if you have forgotten an important password. Vulnerability scanners can also be used on your own network to detect and then block possible entry points for hackers.

I am upgrading my iphone 4 to iOS 5. I backed up my phone (via iTunes 10.5) and downloaded and installed iOS 5. I am now going through the setup process and it is at the "Restore from iTunes Backup" step. I connect to iTunes and iTunes is prompting me for a password to "unlock your iPhone backup file." No I did not encrypt the iPhone backup, nor is it or was it checked in iTunes. I have tried my iTunes password, my 4 digit unlock code for the iPhone, and several other passwords. When I did the backup an hour ago I was not asked for a password. I am at a loss as to what it is.

IT'S YOUR COMPUTER'S PASSWORD, I tried everything else, my iphone passcode, my apple password, none worked except for my computer's password if it doesn't work, unplug the iphone and plug it back in and put the computer's password it will work...

Plug in phone;click on the iPhone icon near upper right hand corner of screen;click on summary tab;under "Backups" click the box "Encrypt iPhone backup", this will prompt you to create a password, which will then work when you go to restore again.

Like most here, I never set a password for my backups previously, so this caught me really off-guard. Also ****** me off b/c I'm going on a trip tomorrow morning and wanted my phone fully updated and functioning before I left. I tried my current Itunes password, didn't work, I tried my four-digit code I use as a locking code for the phone. I tried 1234 mentioned above, none work.

To elaborate on pjlove's post, it was actually my computer's password that I had used when setting up my previous phone. You will need to use your computer's old password if you changed your password since then. I'm fairly certain this is the case since I've never used my computer's previous password for any of my Apple accounts. In short, use the same password you used to lock your computer whenever you initially set up your previous phone with i-Tunes.

Using physical acquisition, the examiner could extract almost all data by accessing phone memory and all files stored there. iOS devices use two types of memory: volatile and non-volatile. RAM load executes important parts of the operating system or application. It gets flushed once the device reboots. Username, passwords, encryption keys and more important artifacts could be found from the RAM. From a forensic perspective, it is crucial to extract information stored in RAM.

For some specific hashing algorithms, CPUs and GPUs are not a good match. Purpose-made hardware is required to run at high speeds. Custom hardware can be made using FPGA or ASIC technology. Development for both technologies is complex and (very) expensive. In general, FPGAs are favorable in small quantities, ASICs are favorable in (very) large quantities, more energy efficient, and faster. In 1998, the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) built a dedicated password cracker using ASICs. Their machine, Deep Crack, broke a DES 56-bit key in 56 hours, testing over 90 billion keys per second.[14] In 2017, leaked documents showed that ASICs were used for a military project that had a potential to code-break many parts of the Internet communications with weaker encryption.[15] Designing and building ASIC-based password crackers is assumed[by whom?] to be out of reach for non-governments.[citation needed] Since 2019, John the Ripper supports password cracking for a limited number of hashing algorithms using FPGAs.[16] Commercial companies are now using FPGA-based setups for password cracking.[17]

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