447 88 4MB
English Pages 28 Year 2005
BLUETOOTH TOOLS Sil Janssens [email protected] January 9, 2005
Abstract Many different tools to access Bluetooth devices can be found on the internet and p2p networks. This document gives a very short overview of the different tools related to Bluetooth security. Date 08/05/2005 05/05/2005 07/12/2004 26/11/2004 24/11/2004 22/11/2004
Author Sil Janssens Sil Janssens Sil Janssens Sil Janssens Sil Janssens Sil Janssens
Comment adding new tools dicovered adding new tools dicovered corrections after remarks of Dave Singelee additions and corrections additions First Draft
Table 1: Version History
Contents 1
Introduction 1.1 Purpose and scope . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1.2 References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
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Bluetooth Tools 2.1 Affix Bluetooth Stack . . . 2.1.1 Manufacturer . . . 2.1.2 Link - Source . . . 2.1.3 Description . . . . 2.1.4 Screenshots / Logo 2.2 Blooover . . . . . . . . . . 2.2.1 Manufacturer . . . 2.2.2 Link - Source . . . 2.2.3 Description . . . . 2.2.4 Screenshots / Logo 2.3 BlueAlert . . . . . . . . . 2.3.1 Manufacturer . . . 2.3.2 Link - Source . . . 2.3.3 Description . . . . 2.4 BlueBug . . . . . . . . . . 2.4.1 Manufacturer . . . 2.4.2 Link - Source . . . 2.4.3 Description . . . . 2.4.4 Screenshots / Logo 2.5 BlueFish . . . . . . . . . . 2.5.1 Manufacturer . . . 2.5.2 Link - Source . . . 2.5.3 Description . . . . 2.5.4 Screenshots / Logo 2.6 BluePrinting . . . . . . . . 2.6.1 Manufacturer . . . 2.6.2 Link - Source . . . 2.6.3 Description . . . . 2.6.4 Screenshots / Logo 2.7 BlueSmack . . . . . . . . 2.7.1 Manufacturer . . . 2.7.2 Link - Source . . . 2.7.3 Description . . . .
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2.7.4 Screenshots / Logo . . . . . . BlueSniff . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2.8.1 Manufacturer . . . . . . . . . 2.8.2 Link - Source . . . . . . . . . 2.8.3 Description . . . . . . . . . . 2.8.4 Screenshots / Logo . . . . . . BlueSniper . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2.9.1 Manufacturer . . . . . . . . . 2.9.2 Link - Source . . . . . . . . . 2.9.3 Description . . . . . . . . . . 2.9.4 Screenshots / Logo . . . . . . BlueSpam . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2.10.1 Manufacturer . . . . . . . . . 2.10.2 Link - Source . . . . . . . . . 2.10.3 Description . . . . . . . . . . 2.10.4 Screenshots / Logo . . . . . . Bluetooth Phone Book Dumper . . . . 2.11.1 Manufacturer . . . . . . . . . 2.11.2 Link - Source . . . . . . . . . 2.11.3 Description . . . . . . . . . . BlueZ Bluetooth Stack . . . . . . . . 2.12.1 Manufacturer . . . . . . . . . 2.12.2 Link - Source . . . . . . . . . 2.12.3 Description . . . . . . . . . . 2.12.4 Screenshots / Logo . . . . . . Braces . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2.13.1 Manufacturer . . . . . . . . . 2.13.2 Link - Source . . . . . . . . . 2.13.3 Description . . . . . . . . . . 2.13.4 Screenshots / Logo . . . . . . bt audit . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2.14.1 Manufacturer . . . . . . . . . 2.14.2 Link - Source . . . . . . . . . 2.14.3 Description . . . . . . . . . . BTBrowser - JABWT Browser . . . . 2.15.1 Manufacturer . . . . . . . . . 2.15.2 Link - Source . . . . . . . . . 2.15.3 Description . . . . . . . . . . 2.15.4 Screenshots / Logo . . . . . . btChat . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2.16.1 Manufacturer . . . . . . . . . 2.16.2 Link - Source . . . . . . . . . 2.16.3 Description . . . . . . . . . . 2.16.4 Screenshots / Logo . . . . . . BTFS Bluetooth FileSystemMapping . 2.17.1 Manufacturer . . . . . . . . . 2.17.2 Link - Source . . . . . . . . . 2.17.3 Description . . . . . . . . . . btScanner . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2.18.1 Manufacturer . . . . . . . . . 3
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2.18.2 Link - Source . . . . 2.18.3 Description . . . . . 2.18.4 Screenshots / Logo . btXML . . . . . . . . . . . 2.19.1 Manufacturer . . . . 2.19.2 Link - Source . . . . 2.19.3 Description . . . . . 2.19.4 Screenshots / Logo . Fine Tooth Comb . . . . . . 2.20.1 Manufacturer . . . . 2.20.2 Link - Source . . . . 2.20.3 Description . . . . . 2.20.4 Screenshots / Logo . FreeJack . . . . . . . . . . . 2.21.1 Manufacturer . . . . 2.21.2 Link - Source . . . . 2.21.3 Description . . . . . 2.21.4 Screenshots / Logo . Gnome Bluetooth Subsystem 2.22.1 Manufacturer . . . . 2.22.2 Link - Source . . . . 2.22.3 Description . . . . . 2.22.4 Screenshots / Logo . HCIDump . . . . . . . . . . 2.23.1 Manufacturer . . . . 2.23.2 Link - Source . . . . 2.23.3 Description . . . . . Impronto . . . . . . . . . . 2.24.1 Manufacturer . . . . 2.24.2 Link - Source . . . . 2.24.3 Description . . . . . 2.24.4 Screenshots / Logo . OpenOBEX . . . . . . . . . 2.25.1 Manufacturer . . . . 2.25.2 Link - Source . . . . 2.25.3 Description . . . . . ObexFTP . . . . . . . . . . 2.26.1 Manufacturer . . . . 2.26.2 Link - Source . . . . 2.26.3 Description . . . . . PsmScan . . . . . . . . . . . 2.27.1 Manufacturer . . . . 2.27.2 Link - Source . . . . 2.27.3 Description . . . . . RedFang . . . . . . . . . . . 2.28.1 Manufacturer . . . . 2.28.2 Link - Source . . . . 2.28.3 Description . . . . . 2.28.4 Screenshots / Logo . RedSnarf . . . . . . . . . .
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Chapter 1
Introduction 1.1 Purpose and scope The purpose of this document is to provide a brief overview of the existent Bluetooth security tools.
1.2 References • Sil Janssens, Preliminary study, VUB, 2004, http://student.vub.ac. be/˜sijansse/2elic/BT/Voorstudie/PreliminaryStudy.pdf • Sil Janssens, Software Requirement Specifications, VUB, 2004, http://student. vub.ac.be/˜sijansse/2elic/BT/SRS/SRS.pdf • other references are included for each tool in the document
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Chapter 2
Bluetooth Tools 2.1 Affix Bluetooth Stack 2.1.1 Manufacturer Affix: Nokia Research Center at Mobile Networks Lab and released under GPL.
2.1.2 Link - Source • http://affix.sourcefourge.net
2.1.3 Description Affix is a Bluetooth Protocol Stack for Linux Affix supports core Bluetooth protocols like HCI, L2CAP, RFCOMM, SDP and various Bluetooth profiles (see bellow). Affix features: • Modular implementation. • Socket interface to HCI, L2CAP and RFCOMM protocols. • Bluetooth module interface independence. • SMP safe. • Multiple Bluetooth devices support. Affix currently supports the following Bluetooth Profiles: • General Access Profile • Service Discovery Profile • Serial Port Profile • DialUp Networking Profile • LAN Access Profile
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• OBEX Object Push Profile • OBEX File Transfer Profile • PAN Profile affix-kernel provides kernel modules implementing core protocols and Bluetooth device drivers. Kernel modules can be used separately from the kernel or can be linked statically into the kernel. affix provides control tools, libraries, and server daemons.
2.1.4 Screenshots / Logo
2.2 Blooover 2.2.1 Manufacturer Trifinite
2.2.2 Link - Source • http://trifinite.org/trifinite_stuff_blooover.html
2.2.3 Description Blooover is a proof-of-concept tool (similar to BlueSnarf) that is intended to run on J2ME-enabled cell phones. Blooover is an audit tool that people can use to check whether their phones and phones of friends and employees are vulnerable.
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2.2.4 Screenshots / Logo
2.3 BlueAlert 2.3.1 Manufacturer TDK
2.3.2 Link - Source • http://www.tdksystems.com/software/apps/content.asp?id= 4 • http://www.tdksystems.com/
2.3.3 Description TDK Systems’ BlueAlert Windows tool creates a ’pop-up ’icon from the system tray, notifying you in advance: • When a Bluetooth device is active, or in range of your PC • If a particular device goes out of range and a connection is lost I only supports TKS Bluetooth devices.
2.4 BlueBug 2.4.1 Manufacturer Trifinite
2.4.2 Link - Source • http://trifinite.org/trifinite_stuff_bluebug.html
2.4.3 Description BlueBug is the name of a Bluetooth security loophole on some Bluetooth-enabled cell phones. Exploiting this loophole allows the unauthorized downloading phone books and call lists, the sending and reading of SMS messages from the attacked phone and many more things. The tool and source code is NOT available! 9
2.4.4 Screenshots / Logo
2.5 BlueFish 2.5.1 Manufacturer nobodaddy
2.5.2 Link - Source • http://www.nobodaddy.org/portfolio/bluefish.htm
2.5.3 Description Bluefish is a surveillance system which tracks the presence of Bluetooth devices, and their users. Bluefish constantly scans for Bluetooth-enabled devices, such as phones, PDA’s, and wireless peripherals. When a new device is found, Bluefish takes a picture of the area in which the device is discovered and catalogues all retrievable information about the device. If the device is ever discovered again, the user will be sent the last image captured of them via Bluetooth. All images are tagged with the device’s name and the time it was last observed. Over time, a profile is built for each discovered device, making it possible to track individual users who frequent the scanning area.
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2.5.4 Screenshots / Logo
2.6 BluePrinting 2.6.1 Manufacturer Collin Mulliner and Martin Herfurt, Trifinite
2.6.2 Link - Source • http://trifinite.org/trifinite_stuff_blueprinting.html • http://trifinite.org/Downloads/Blueprinting.pdf • http://trifinite.org/Downloads/bp_v100.zip
2.6.3 Description Blueprinting is a method to remotely find out details about bluetooth-enabled devices. Blueprinting can be used for generating statistics about manufacturers and models and to find out whether there are devices in range that have issues with Bluetooth security. Every bluetooth-enabled device has some characteristics that are either unique (Bluetooth device address), maufacturer specific (the first part of the bluetooth device address) or model-specific (service description records). Blueprinting is combining the different information that Bluetooth-enabled devices reveal in order to determine the manufacturer as well as the model of the device. Upon different characteristics it is also possible to tell about the respective firmware version that runs on certain devices. Every Bluetooth-enabled device that offers services to other Bluetooth-enabled devices does announce these services via the service discovery protocol (SDP). So, remote devices can query devices upon the offered capabilities.
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2.6.4 Screenshots / Logo
2.7 BlueSmack 2.7.1 Manufacturer Trifinite
2.7.2 Link - Source • http://trifinite.org/trifinite_stuff_bluesmack.html • http://www.insecure.org/sploits/ping-o-death.html
2.7.3 Description BlueSmack is a Bluetooth attack that knocks out some Bluetooth-enabled devices immediately. This Denial of Service attack can be conducted using standard tools that ship with the official Linux Bluez utils package.
2.7.4 Screenshots / Logo
2.8 BlueSniff 2.8.1 Manufacturer The Shmoo Group, Bruce Potter - Brian Caswell
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2.8.2 Link - Source • http://bluesniff.shmoo.com/ • http://www.shmoo.com/˜gdead/dc-11-brucepotter.ppt • http://bluesniff.shmoo.com/bluesniff-0.1.tar.gz
2.8.3 Description Bluesniff is proof of concept code for a Bluetooth wardriving utility. It provided a GUI for finding discoverable and hidden Bluetooth devices. It is focused on providing a UI Front-end for Redfang.
2.8.4 Screenshots / Logo
2.9 BlueSniper 2.9.1 Manufacturer Flexilis
2.9.2 Link - Source • http://www.flexilis.com • http://www.blueserker.com/html/modules.php?op=modload&name= News&file=index&catid=&topic=14
2.9.3 Description The BlueSniper is a rifle stock with a scope and yagi antenna attached. A cable attaches the antenna to the Bluetooth card, which can be in a PDA or laptop computer. The laptop can be carried in a backpack with the cables connecting into the backpack, giving it the Ghostbusters look.
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The Flexilis teams demonstrated the gun with some home-brewed Bluetooth scanning software. They pointed the gun down the hallways and out windows. Almost instantly, vulnerable phones with their unique Bluetooth device numbers appeared on the laptop screen. The device is powerful enough to detect devices through building walls.
2.9.4 Screenshots / Logo
2.10 BlueSpam 2.10.1 Manufacturer Collin R. Mulliner
2.10.2 Link - Source • http://www.mulliner.org/palm/bluespam.php
2.10.3 Description BlueSpam is a Palm OS application that searches for all discoverable Bluetooth devices and send a arbitrary file to them if they support OBEX.
2.10.4 Screenshots / Logo
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2.11 Bluetooth Phone Book Dumper 2.11.1 Manufacturer Collin R. Mulliner
2.11.2 Link - Source • http://www.saftware.de/bluetooth/btxml.c
2.11.3 Description Bluetooth phone book dumper creates a backup of the Nokia 6310i via bluetooth. It also works on some Ericsson mobile phones. The data is written to stdout in a standard xml format. There is no need to enter any data on the host or phone side and no pairing is needed, it simply uses GSM AT commands over a RFCOMM connection. The software uses the Linux BlueZ Bluetooth stack.
2.12 BlueZ Bluetooth Stack 2.12.1 Manufacturer BlueZ Project
2.12.2 Link - Source • http://www.bluez.org
2.12.3 Description BlueZ is an implementation of the Bluetooth wireless standards specifications for Linux. The code is licensed under the GNU General Public License (GPL) and is now included in the Linux 2.4 and Linux 2.6 kernel series. BlueZ provides support for the core Bluetooth layers and protocols. It is flexible, efficient and uses a modular implementation. It has many interesting features: • Complete modular implementation • Symmetric multi processing safe • Multithreaded data processing • Support for multiple Bluetooth devices • Real hardware abstraction • Standard socket interface to all layers • Device and service level security support
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Currently BlueZ consists of many separate modules: • Bluetooth kernel subsystem core • L2CAP and SCO audio kernel layers • RFCOMM, BNEP, CMTP and HIDP kernel implementations • HCI UART, USB, PCMCIA and virtual device drivers • General Bluetooth and SDP libraries and daemons • Configuration and testing utilities • Protocol decoding and analysis tools The BlueZ kernel modules, libraries and utilities are known to be working prefect on many architectures supported by Linux.
2.12.4 Screenshots / Logo
2.13 Braces 2.13.1 Manufacturer The Shmoo Group, Bruce Potter, Brian
2.13.2 Link - Source • http://braces.shmoo.com/
2.13.3 Description Bluetooth tracking application used at a demonstration on the BlackHat conference USA 2004.
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2.13.4 Screenshots / Logo
2.14 bt audit 2.14.1 Manufacturer Collin R. Mulliner
2.14.2 Link - Source • http://www.betaversion.net/btdsd/
2.14.3 Description bt audit is a suit of programs and scripts to do Bluetooth device auditing. The suit currently consists of two port scanners, psm scan for the L2CAP layer and rfcomm scan for the RFCOMM layer.
2.15 BTBrowser - JABWT Browser 2.15.1 Manufacturer Klings.org BenHui.net
2.15.2 Link - Source • http://www.benhui.net/bluetooth/btbrowser.html • http://www.benhui.net/bluetooth/btbrowser.jar • http://www.benhui.net/bluetooth/btbrowser.jad • http://wireless.klings.org/main.php/BTBrowser/ • http://wireless.klings.org/source/btbrowser_src.zip
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2.15.3 Description Bluetooth (JABWT) Browser is a J2ME MIDP MIDlet that can browse and explore the technical specification of surrounding Bluetooth devices. BTBrowser will discover nearby devices (if they are discoverable. You can browse device Bluetooth information and all supported profiles and service records of each device. This is a great utility tool to sniff bluetooth information. This MIDlet MIDP2.0/CLDC1.0 works on phones that support JSR-82 (a.k.a JABWT or Java Bluetooth) specification. Examples are Nokia 6600 and Sony Ericsson P900. The following attributes will be shown if they are set in the Bluetooth service record: • 0x0100, ServiceName • 0x0101, ServiceDescription • 0x0102, ProviderName • 0x0000, ServiceRecordHandle • 0x0003, ServiceID • 0x0001, ServiceClassIDList • 0x0004, ProtocolDescriptorList • 0x0009, BluetoothProfileDescriptorList • 0x0007, ServiceInfoTimeToLive • 0x0008, ServiceAvailability • 0x000A, DocumentationURL • 0x000B, ClientExecutableURK • 0x000C, IconURL
2.15.4 Screenshots / Logo
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2.16 btChat 2.16.1 Manufacturer Collin R. Mulliner
2.16.2 Link - Source • http://www.mulliner.org/bluetooth/btchat/
2.16.3 Description btChat is a Bluetooth based chatting/IM (instant messaging) system
2.16.4 Screenshots / Logo
2.17 BTFS Bluetooth FileSystemMapping 2.17.1 Manufacturer Collin R. Mulliner
2.17.2 Link - Source • www.mulliner.org/bluetooth/btfs.php
2.17.3 Description BTFS brings basic Bluetooth support to the filesystem by mapping functions like inquiry (search for Bluetooth devices) and file transfer (via OBEX) to normal file operations. BTFS is a FUSE (Filesystem in USErspace) application. With btfs a simple ls DEVICES shows you all Bluetooth devices within range and cp somefile OPUSH/devicename sends the given file to the device (via OBEX).
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2.18 btScanner 2.18.1 Manufacturer Pentest
2.18.2 Link - Source http://www.pentest.co.uk/cgi-bin/viewcat.cgi?cat=downloads§ion= 01_bluetooth
2.18.3 Description btscanner is a tool designed specifically to extract as much information as possible from a Bluetooth device without the requirement to pair. A detailed information screen extracts HCI and SDP information, and maintains an open connection to monitor the RSSI and link quality. btscanner is based on the BlueZ Bluetooth stack, which is included with recent Linux kernels, and the BlueZ toolset. btscanner also contains a complete listing of the IEEE OUI numbers and class lookup tables. Using the information gathered from these sources it is possible to make educated guesses as to the host device type.
2.18.4 Screenshots / Logo
2.19 btXML 2.19.1 Manufacturer Saftware, Andreas Oberritter, GNU General Public License
2.19.2 Link - Source • www.saftware.de/bluetooth/btxml.c
2.19.3 Description Creates a backup of the Nokia 6310i (and for Ericsson T610 and T68i) via Bluetooth.
2.19.4 Screenshots / Logo
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2.20 Fine Tooth Comb 2.20.1 Manufacturer The Shmoo Group
2.20.2 Link - Source • http://bluetooth.shmoo.com • http://www.oook.cz/bsd/bluetooth.html
2.20.3 Description A Bluetooth scanner for FreeBSD. This tool tries to find other Bluetooth devices in three different ways: • A periodic inquiry scan About every minute (it varies) discoverable devices are listed. These show up as: ++¿IR¿MAC ADDRESS • Report devices that try to connect to the scanning host If somebody tries to check what services you are offering, it makes note of what address tried to connect. (It rejects them.) You must have inquiry and page scanning turned on for this to be of use. These show up as: ++¿CR¿MAC ADDRESS¿A for ACL, S for SCO¿Device Class • Brute force It steps through each of the manufacturers listed in ftc manuf.h and tries all possible device IDs. This is very slow! Devices that are found show up as: ++¿BF¿MAC ADDRESS If the attempt times out, it will show: –¿BF¿MAC ADDRESS
2.20.4 Screenshots / Logo
2.21 FreeJack 2.21.1 Manufacturer Software13
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2.21.2 Link - Source • http://www.software13.co.uk/freejack/
2.21.3 Description FreeJack is a Java based BlueJacking application for mobile devices. The aim of this software is to allow the anonymous sending of messages to Bluetooth enabled devices within range.
2.21.4 Screenshots / Logo
2.22 Gnome Bluetooth Subsystem 2.22.1 Manufacturer Useful Information Company, GPL
2.22.2 Link - Source • http://usefulinc.com/software/gnome-bluetooth/
2.22.3 Description Current features include: • Controller object to manage the discovery of nearby Bluetooth devices • Controller will create serial (RFCOMM) connections for clients to devices • libbtcl, a GObject wrapper for Bluetooth functionality An OBEX server, so you can ”beam” files such as pictures, addresses or contacts from other Bluetooth devices to your computer • An OBEX push send tool, so you can beam files from your computer to remote devices. • Nautilus menu integration
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2.22.4 Screenshots / Logo
2.23 HCIDump 2.23.1 Manufacturer Maxim Krasnyansky
2.23.2 Link - Source • http://linuxcommand.org/man_pages/hcidump8.html
2.23.3 Description HCIDump is a HCI packet analyzer. It reads raw HCI data coming from and going to a Bluetooth device and prints to screen commands, events and data in a human-readable form.
2.24 Impronto 2.24.1 Manufacturer Rococo Software
2.24.2 Link - Source • http://rococosoft.com • http://www.rococosoft.com/blue_university.html • http://www.rococosoft.com/blue_dk.html
2.24.3 Description Impronto Developer Kit is a standards-based Java tool designed to make building Bluetooth applications easy. Impronto’s framework hides complex Bluetooth protocols behind standard Java APIs (JSR82), letting developers focus on writing wireless applications rather than on low-level Bluetooth networking issues. The result is faster, easier construction of Bluetooth applications. 23
Support for IrDA - ircomm and irdaobex - which allows access to infrared wireless technologies through standardised specifications (Linux Developer Kit only) Provides abstractions of Bluetooth wireless communication using the Java 2 Platform, Micro Edition (J2ME) Generic Connection Framework Based on J2ME Connected Limited Device Configuration (CLDC) Addresses primary Bluetooth profiles: • Generic Access Profile • Service Discovery Profile • Serial Port Profile • Generic Object Exchange Profile
2.24.4 Screenshots / Logo
2.25 OpenOBEX 2.25.1 Manufacturer OpenOBEX Sourceforge, LGPL GPL
2.25.2 Link - Source • http://openobex.sourceforge.net/ • http://prdownloads.sourceforge.net/openobex/openobex-1. 0.1.tar.gz 24
• http://prdownloads.sourceforge.net/openobex/openobex-apps-1. 0.0.tar.gz
2.25.3 Description Free open source implementation of the Object Exchange (OBEX) protocol. OBEX is a session protocol and can best be described as a binary HTTP protocol. OBEX is optimized for ad-hoc wireless links and can be used to exchange all kind of objects like files, pictures, calendar entries (vCal) and business cards (vCard). The OpenOBEX Project has a sample IrCp (infrared copy) application and an associated ObexFTP application.
2.26 ObexFTP 2.26.1 Manufacturer OpenOBEX Sourceforge, LGPL GPL
2.26.2 Link - Source • http://triq.net/obex/ • http://openobex.sourceforge.net/ • http://prdownloads.sourceforge.net/openobex/obexftp-0. 10.3.tar.gz • http://triq.net/obex/examples.html
2.26.3 Description Free open source implementation of the Object Exchange (OBEX) protocol. OBEX is a session protocol and can best be described as a binary HTTP protocol. OBEX is optimized for ad-hoc wireless links and can be used to exchange all kind of objects like files, pictures, calendar entries (vCal) and business cards (vCard). The common usage for ObexFTP is to access your mobile phones memory to store and retrieve e.g. your phonebook, logos, ringtones, music, pictures and alike.
2.27 PsmScan 2.27.1 Manufacturer Collin R. Mulliner
2.27.2 Link - Source • http://www.betaversion.net/btdsd/
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2.27.3 Description This tool was written as part of the ”Bluetooth device security database” project. Some hardware manufacturers could hide ”special” functions on PSMs (Protocol/Service Multiplexer) without listing them in the SDP database, this tool should find them. It scans a range of L2CAP PSMs to check if they are open (accept connections)
2.28 RedFang 2.28.1 Manufacturer Ollie Whitehouse, @stake
2.28.2 Link - Source • http://www.atstake.com • http://www.securiteam.com/tools/5JP0I1FAAE.html • http://cansecwest.com/csw04/csw04-Whitehouse.pdf
2.28.3 Description RedFang is an application that finds non-discoverable Bluetooth devices by bruteforcing the last six bytes of the device’s Bluetooth address and doing a read remote name().
2.28.4 Screenshots / Logo
2.29 RedSnarf 2.29.1 Manufacturer Ollie Whitehouse, @stake
2.29.2 Link - Source • http://www.atstake.com • http://cansecwest.com/csw04/csw04-Whitehouse.pdf • http://www.thebunker.net/security/bluetooth.htm
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2.29.3 Description RedSnarf is the @stake implementation of the BlueStumbler/BlueSnarf application: OBEX PULL’ing / Snarf’ing. On some makes of devices, it is possible to connect to the device, without alerting the owner of the target device of the request, and gain access to restricted portions of the stored data, including the phonebook, calendar, realtime clock, business card, properties, IMEI. The tool and source code is NOT available!
2.29.4 Screenshots / Logo
2.30 The Bluetooth Location Tracker Project 2.30.1 Manufacturer Collin R. Mulliner, GPL
2.30.2 Link - Source • http://www.betaversion.net/blt/ • http://www.betaversion.net/blt/blt.pdf
2.30.3 Description Linux software to track Bluetooth devices in combination with a GPS devices.
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