PyBozoCrack 3 is a depressingly effective MD5 password hash cracker with almost zero CPU/GPU load written in Python 3. Instead of rainbow tables, dictionaries, or brute force, PyBozoCrack simply finds the plaintext password. Specifically, it googles the MD5 hash and hopes the plaintext appears somewhere on the first page of results.
- Free software: BSD license
It works way better than it ever should. Go ahead and try.
Basic usage:
$ pybozocrack -f my_md5_hashes.txt
Or:
$ pybozocrack -s fcf1eed8596699624167416a1e7e122e
The input file has no specified format. BozoCrack automatically picks up strings that look like MD5 hashes. A single line shouldn't contain more than one hash.
Example with output:
$ pybozocrack -f example.txt
Loaded 5 unique hashes
fcf1eed8596699624167416a1e7e122e:octopus
bed128365216c019988915ed3add75fb:passw0rd
d0763edaa9d9bd2a9516280e9044d885:monkey
dfd8c10c1b9b58c8bf102225ae3be9eb:12081977
ede6b50e7b5826fe48fc1f0fe772c48f:1q2w3e4r5t6y
$ pybozocrack -s fcf1eed8596699624167416a1e7e122e
fcf1eed8596699624167416a1e7e122e:octopus
To show just how bad an idea it is to use plain MD5 as a password hashing mechanism. Honestly, if the passwords can be cracked with this software, there are no excuses.
BozoCrack was originally written by Juuso Salonen (http://twitter.com/juusosalonen).
PyBozoCrack was rewritten in Python by Henrique Pereira (http://ikke.top).