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A simple script demonstrating the power that comes with SSID sniffing

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DISCLAIMER

ONLY USE THIS TOOL ON YOURSELF OR PEOPLE THAT EXPLICITLY ALLOWED YOU TO. THIS TOOL IS CAPABLE OF TRACKING PEOPLES' HOMES AND PLACES THEY VISIT OR HAVE VISITED IN THE PAST. DO NOT USE THIS TOOL WHEN NEAR SOMEONE ELSE'S WIRELESS DEVICE UNLESS YOU ARE ALLOWED TO BY THAT PERSON. DO NOT USE THIS TOOL IN A CROWDED AREA WHERE YOU ARE UNCERTAIN WHETHER YOU COULD UNINTENTIONALLY SCAN FOREIGN DEVICES. THIS TOOL MERELY IS A DEMONSTRATION OF THE POSSIBILITIES THAT COME WITH THE KNOWLEDGE OF SSIDS. YOU ARE COMPLETELY LIABLE FOR ANY (LEGAL) CONSEQUENCES WHEN USING THIS TOOL. THE AUTHOR CAN NEITHER BE HELD RESPONSIBLE NOR CHARGED IN ANY WAY FOR YOUR ACTIONS AND YOUR USE OF THIS TOOL.

THIS TOOL IS OPEN SOURCE - THIS MEANS THAT YOU KNOW WHAT YOU ARE DOING WHEN RUNNING THIS TOOL.

FOR MORE INFORMATION, READ THE LICENSE.

hey, you!

heyyou is a tool for sniffing WiFi probe requests, filtering out the requested SSIDs and determining the physical locations of the access points those SSIDs map to.

This tool is intended for demonstration purposes only, showing unaware audiences the risks that come with

  • easily identifiable SSIDs,
  • leaving a phone's / laptop's WiFi powered on when in public.

Installation

git clone https://github.com/abzicht/heyyou
cd heyyou
python3 setup.py install

Requirements

  • Your pc must have a wireless interface that supports monitor mode.
  • ip, iw, need to be installed
  • You need an auth code for the Wigle api

Running heyyou

Pure sniff

Only sniff for SSIDs, do not search for physical locations:

heyyou wlp2s0

If you do not know your WiFi interface's name (something like wlp2s0), here is how you can obtain it:

# this prints out all WiFi interfaces connected to your pc
iw dev

# this command uses some unix magic to determine the first WiFi interface
# in the list and automatically use it for heyyou:
iw dev | grep -m 1 Interface | cut -d ' ' -f 2 | xargs heyyou

Sniff and evaluation

Sniff for SSIDs and search for the physical locations of access points using the Wigle api with the help of the authtoken.

heyyou -w <authtoken> wlp2s0

If you do not want to see your authtoken in the shell history, use some UNIX magic:

cat authtoken.txt | xargs heyyou wlp2s0 -w

This assumes, of course, that your exact authtoken is stored in authtoken.txt.

You find your authtoken here.

Sniff and brand evaluation

Wireless devices send their MAC address in most WiFi frames. You can utilize Cisco's MAC vendor list to determine the brands of the sniffed devices. This helps in identifying which device searched for which SSID.

heyyou -m mac_vendors.xml wlp2s0

This assumes that the file ./mac_vendors.xml contains Cisco's MAC vendor list.

If that is not the case, here is how you can obtain it:

curl https://macaddress.io/database/macaddress.io-db-cisco-vendor.xml > ./mac_vendors.xml

Demonstration

When demonstrating this tool to an audience (that previously agreed on this attack), it would be nice to NOT print out the audience's postal addresses and more. For that purpose, use the -c flag to censor the most sensitive information:

heyyou -m mac_vendors.xml -c -w <authtoken> wlp2s0

Summary

The tool prints out most (not all) retrieved information on the fly. Add the -s flag to store all information in a neat json file.

heyyou -s heyyou.json wlp2s0

The all in one command

The following command automatically determines the WiFi interface to use, the authtoken to use for Wigle, and translates MAC addresses to brand names. All information is printed to stdout, sensitive information is censored, a summary is stored as heyyou.json.

heyyou -w $(cat authtoken.txt) \
       -m mac_vendors.xml -c \
       -s heyyou.json \
       $(iw dev | grep -m 1 Interface | cut -d ' ' -f 2)

Output

As soon as a device searching for WiFi is found, its MAC address and SSID it searches for are output to stdout.
Assuming the MAC address is 00:00:00:00:00:00 and the AP's SSID is MyWiFi, the output looks like this:

00:00:00:00:00:00 -> MyWiFi

When a MAC-Vendor list was specified and the MAC address resolves to a valid vendor, the output also contains the vendor's name:

00:00:00:00:00:00 ({vendor}) -> MyWiFi

When using the Wigle API functionality, Wigle's response to the SSID is added.
Assuming that Wigle found 30 matches for the SSID MyWiFi, the number of entries would be appended to the SSID and all 30 entries would be appended line by line.

00:00:00:00:00:00 -> MyWiFi (30 results)
    {latitude},{longitude}: {country} - {region} - {city} - {postalcode} - {street} - {house number} ({last update})

Wigle limits the number of results being sent for one request. Only the top 100 entries are returned and therefore there are never more than 100 rows being printed out for one SSID.

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A simple script demonstrating the power that comes with SSID sniffing

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