PLA Forums
Other Stuff That Has Little To Do With PLA => Techinical Shit => Phreaking, Hacking, Social Engineering, Lock Picking => Topic started by: Arox! on March 09, 2009, 12:42:20 PM
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http://warvox.org/
WarVOX is a suite of tools for exploring, classifying, and auditing telephone systems. Unlike normal wardialing tools, WarVOX works with the actual audio from each call and does not use a modem directly. This model allows WarVOX to find and classify a wide range of interesting lines, including modems, faxes, voice mail boxes, PBXs, loops, dial tones, IVRs, and forwarders. WarVOX provides the unique ability to classify all telephone lines in a given range, not just those connected to modems, allowing for a comprehensive audit of a telephone system.
Looks pretty slick, from what I read it does speech to text, and makes all types of graphs and charts of your scans.
EDIT: Here is some more stuff I found and by found I mean stole from binrev.
Scan Log
http://warvox.org/misc/lumenvox_round1.txt
Graphic representation of live numbers
http://s5.tinypic.com/3486pw8.jpg
Man I really wanna try this but I don't have money for an IAX provider
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Nice! I love those screen shots. I used to love war dialing even though I had no use for the things I found. This program makes me want to start again.
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http://packetstormsecurity.org/filedesc/warvox-1.0.0.pdf.html
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what VoIP systems is it compatible with?
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what VoIP systems is it compatible with?
http://warvox.org/providers.html
Service Providers
WarVOX makes phone calls over VoIP using the IAX protocol developed for Asterix. Each of the providers below support the IAX protocol, offer competitive rates, and do not have specific policies against wardialing. Most "unlimited plan" service providers have terms of service which place severe restrictions on wardialing and any usage pattern which is outside of the residential norm. If you recommend a specific IAX-capable VoIP provider, please contact us and we can include it in this list. If you would like to dial using a SIP-based provider you will need to setup an Asterix server and configure the IAX service.
CallWithUs
Vitelity
Teliax
TelaSIP
For a larger list of providers, please see http://www.voipproviderlist.com/.
I have a Vitality account, which I might use this try it out sometime.
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Wow, that looks really really cool. I bet it's a cpu hogger though. Where I work there's a system that records calls and does speech-to-text and other analysis. There's a dedicated server just for that which runs hot as hell, two quad-core cpus running 100% all day and night.
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http://warvox.org/
WarVOX is a suite of tools for exploring, classifying, and auditing telephone systems. Unlike normal wardialing tools, WarVOX works with the actual audio from each call and does not use a modem directly. This model allows WarVOX to find and classify a wide range of interesting lines, including modems, faxes, voice mail boxes, PBXs, loops, dial tones, IVRs, and forwarders. WarVOX provides the unique ability to classify all telephone lines in a given range, not just those connected to modems, allowing for a comprehensive audit of a telephone system.
Looks pretty slick, from what I read it does speech to text, and makes all types of graphs and charts of your scans.
EDIT: Here is some more stuff I found and by found I mean stole from binrev.
Scan Log
http://warvox.org/misc/lumenvox_round1.txt
Graphic representation of live numbers
http://s5.tinypic.com/3486pw8.jpg
Man I really wanna try this but I don't have money for an IAX provider
I apologize for my ignorance, but what's an IAX?
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If you're not a lazy bastard you can write a simple wardialing script for Skype in python if you download the Skype4py plugin. Sure, you won't get all the fancy graphs and you have to actually listen to the calls yourself but I always thought that was part of the fun of wardialing.
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If you're not a lazy bastard you can write a simple wardialing script for Skype in python if you download the Skype4py plugin. Sure, you won't get all the fancy graphs and you have to actually listen to the calls yourself but I always thought that was part of the fun of wardialing.
But then you wouldn't feel like David Lightman!