In-Reply-To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

Hello Bernhard,
You are right. Some Windows recognize an arp-poisoning,
but in this case you have to "arp-storm" only the
others(not the windows victim).
Then poison the windows-arp-cache in the name of the
router(,gateway,...) and the same with the
router-arp-cache.
And the 2nd if u ping the router (router ip) you ping
not the router.You ping the poisoner (me). Because your
arp cache think i am the router.And i answer u with a
ping. So even on linux u dont find me.
Only solution is to look in the arp-cache if it is
poisoned.
For beginner "ettercap" will do a good job. In this
programm is a point "looking for other poisoners".
So you might find me.

Will Tell

 
>
>Hi Michael!
>
>I did not test it out too much, but if you are in the
same network =
>windows
>will warn that the same IP-Adress is twice on the net.
>On Linux you see it, if you ping the router, he shows
that the ping is
>redirected.
>can anyone verify this? other than that ?????
>
>Mit freundlichen Gr=FC=DFen/ sincerely yours
>
>
>Bernhard Fuchs=20
>Junior System-Engineer=20
>IT-Infrastruktur
>
>ITELLIUM=20
>Systems & Services GmbH=20
>F=FCrther Stra=DFe 205=20
>90429 N=FCrnberg=20
>
>Tel.:   +49-911-14-27321=20
>Fax:    +49-911-14-22016=20
>mailto:bernhard.fuchs@;itellium.com=20
>http://www.itellium.com
>
>


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