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Showing posts from August, 2012

How to Hack Facebook Password in 5 Ways

Check out the following post from  fonelovetz blog  on facebook account hacking. This is one of the most popular questions which I'm asked via my email.And today I'm going to solve this problem one it for all.Even though i have already written a few ways of hacking a facebook password.Looks like i got to tidy up the the stuff here.The first thing i want to tell is.You can not hack or crack a facebook password by a click of a button.That's totally impossible and if you find such tools on the internet then please don't waste your time by looking at them! They are all fake.Ok now let me tell you how to hack a facebook account. I'll be telling you 5 of the basic ways in which a beginner hacker would hack.They are: 1.Social Engineering 2.Keylogging 3.Reverting Password / Password Recovery Through Primary Email 4.Facebook Phishing Page/ Softwares 5.Stealers/RATS/Trojans I'll explain each of these one by one in brief.If you want to know more about them just

5 Ways To Avoid Being Hacked

Hacking. We often think of it happening to companies or governments. But it also happens to ordinary people.  But we can take steps to stop it. Step 1: Tough passwords You need to have a separate password for each account, so that if one account gets hacked, all of your vital information is not vulnerable. The problem is that it's tough to remember dozens of passwords. The answer: a password manager. There are a variety of third-party software programs that will create and store passwords for you. Step 2: Two-Part Authentication When you log on to many different computers — especially shared computers — to access your email account, you are especially vulnerable to hackers. Many websites are moving toward two-step verification.  Google is one . Essentially, it means that you need more than a password to log into a new account. If you use the service, you have to remember a password but also remember a special key that gets sent to you as a text. Step 3: Chang

How to avoid being hacked like Honan

Hackers used an iCloud account to perform a remote wipe on Mat Honan's iPhone, iPad and MacBook, deleting all his data. Photograph: M4OS Photos/Alamy I read about Mat Honan, the journalist who had his  email  hacked and his devices wiped. What should we all be doing to avoid this kind of thing? For those who missed the story, Wired journalist Mat Honan had his Gmail  and Twitter accounts hacked, which is not all that unusual. What made the story "epic" was that the hacker(s) used his  Apple  iCloud account to perform a "remote wipe" on his iPhone, iPad and MacBook, deleting all his data. Worse still, he didn't have backups. It was evident that something had gone wrong from the tweets the hacker sent from Honan's Twitter account and Gizmodo's account, to which it was linked. (He used to work there.) Honan went public on 3 August 2012 in a blogpost:  Yes, I was hacked. Hard.  At the time, he blamed his old seven-digit alphanumeric passwor