Ranter
Join devRant
Do all the things like
++ or -- rants, post your own rants, comment on others' rants and build your customized dev avatar
Sign Up
Pipeless API
From the creators of devRant, Pipeless lets you power real-time personalized recommendations and activity feeds using a simple API
Learn More
Comments
-
lig114458yOn the other hand you are going to find out how much time it will need to potential intruder to get your door key.
-
@lig1 currently it's about an hour and I'm wondering if there even is a code or whether this is just an elaborate practical joke.
Either way I live in rural Derbyshire. I've left my iPhone on top of my car all night before and come back in the morning and it was still there. -
lig114458y@SirusAmory you never know. Some people live for years with old Joomla versions on their sites and then suddenly...
-
First try all the 0000/..., 1234/... and 9876/... combinations.
If that doesn't work push the button/lever to the open position and start rotating the dials until you sense a digit acting differently consistently.
These boxes are mostly crap (the combination locks even crappier) and even a high quality one will just attract thieves who may have the strength or the tool to open it in no time.
If you want a key for emergencies buy a small aluminium rod, make/attach a hook on one end and secure the key on the other. Then push it in the ground in your garden or somewhere close by so it's below the surface, no-one can easily see you mess with it and you can remember its position (third brick from the right, under that window, etc). -
Grumpy28878yI bet you'll find a note saying:
"This was the first place I looked for keys.
-The Thief" -
I did that on a 3-digit lock. Took about 20 minutes or about 1.5 seconds per combination.
-
ldrago1688yYou're going to need a raspberry pi, five servos,a ball point pen and a few rubber bands.
-
Sorry for keeping you guys in the dark so long. Honestly didn't expect this to get followed by so many people.
It finally cracked at 5359. About three hours work all in (accounting for me going inside to warm my hands up on some coffee periodically). -
Grumpy28878y@SirusAmory If you move, remember to change the code to 0666, place a picture of Baphomet inside the safe and tell the new residents that you don't know the code.
-
@g-m-f Well we are not exactly the most dangerous people around too, so I guess that's a good idea.
Even if they come to steal something after all. If you leave Arch Linux halfway through installation they will take the bait and work on it till morning. -
@SirusAmory No. A physical honeypot, as in lets say a key that is marked "inner door" (but fits nowhere) on a double door house*, and then the lockbox wired to a silent 24h zone on your alarm panel, isn't illegal.
Also place a paper on the window sill, visible from outer through he window, with "keybox code: 1234", so it looks like you accidentially forgot the paper there. (change code to 1234).
* So the burgular starts attacking the outer door beliving the inner door will be "free", but will instead be picked up by the police because the alarm was tripped early. -
mrlkts1028yI really don't understand. Do you not carry your own set of keys from your own house? Why is it easier to store it outside of your house in a box than just putting it in your pocket and carry it around?
-
Post a job offering asking for degrees in padlocks and experience with bruteforce, gardening, electricity, architect and plumber and that also speaks 4 languages natively to bruteforce your keypad. Oh and don't forget offer them an internship and tell them if you like his job that you'll hire him for future jobs where'll get paid...
Related Rants
Bruteforce IRL
So I recently bought my first house (yay!).
Whilst doing the initial viewings I saw the below on the backyard and thought "hey that's neat, I can leave a key in there for when I come in late and my fiancée is asleep.
Fast forward to moving in day and the previous owners hand me the keys so I ask "oh yeah, what's the code for the keysafe" and he just looks at me completely blank, so I'm just like "the box on the wall out back" and he's just like "oh! So that's what that is. No we've never had the code for that, bye."
Being a pen tester I'm just stood there dumbfounded thinking "How the hell can you have a locked box attached to your house and not want to know what is inside!"
Anyway, that brings us to now where I'm stood outside in December on a Sunday morning brute forcing my way into my own keysafe.
I wish this didn't run so many parallels with my work life 😂
undefined
nazi gold
penetration testing
bruteforce