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Full Discussion: Do you know Shodan?
Special Forums Cybersecurity IT Security RSS Do you know Shodan? Post 302469362 by Linux Bot on Friday 5th of November 2010 04:15:01 PM
Old 11-05-2010
Do you know Shodan?

Wellcome to Shodan.

If you're thinking "What on Earth is it?", please read the lines below. If you're already familiar with, move to the next Section.

So here's the basic: SHODAN (Sentient Hyper-Optimized Data Access Network) is a search engine, but instead of indexing web page content,  it indexes banners information. It indexes data on HTTP, SSH, FTP, TELNET and SNMP services for almost the whole Internet. You can find it at http://www.shodanhq.com

You can do basic searching for free. An account and credit are required for some features.

 

What can I do with it?

A lot of things.

For good and for worst.

Per example, you can ask for network devices that shows up banner information (routers, switches, printers, voip phones, etc). Tunning your filter and you can find devices without authentication or with default passwords (a lot of them, on a lot of places).

You can find out vulnerable systems. Where they are, who owns it.

And you can do it easily. Shodan is like "Google" for network scanning.

Of course, you can use Shodan to track vulnerable/exposed system or devices on your network and work to close the breaches.

 

Is it legal?

A controversial point.

If we look on terms of technical arguments, SHODAN is a massive port scanner and the precedent set is that port scanning is not a violation of the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act because it does not meet the requirement for damage the availability or integrity of the device.

But, of course someone can use it to dig information about a certain network to start an attack.

I believe this is more an "is it moral or not?", than a "is it legal or not?" case.

 

Conclusion

There's plenty on documents and presentations over the Internet (on this case, Google will help a lot) so it's pointless here to focus on how to use Shodan.

But, I'll gibe you and advice.

Check your network against Shodan just in case.

It can solve a lot of pain in the future

 

Best Regards

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ntext(n)					     Alternative Bindings for the Text Widget						  ntext(n)

__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

NAME
ntext - Alternative Bindings for the Text Widget SYNOPSIS
package require Tcl 8.5 package require Tk 8.5 package require ntext ?0.81? _________________________________________________________________ DESCRIPTION
The purpose of the ntext package is to make the text widget behave more like other text-editing applications. It makes the text widget more useful for implementing a text editor, and makes it behave in a way that will be more familiar to most users. The package provides a binding tag named Ntext for use by text widgets in place of the default Text binding tag. Package ntext 's functions and variables are contained entirely in the ::ntext namespace; its other code is contained in the binding tag Ntext. ntext has no exports to the global or other namespaces, and no new widget commands. It uses modified copies of the Tk code, leav- ing the original code, and the Text binding tag, unchanged. The differences between the Ntext binding tag and the default Text binding tag are in three categories: o Some Text bindings behave differently from most text-editing applications. Ntext gives these bindings more familiar behaviour. For details see ntextBindings. o When a logical line with leading whitespace is word-wrapped onto more than one display line, the wrapped display lines begin further to the left than the first display line, which can make the text layout untidy and difficult to read. Ntext can indent the wrapped lines to match the leading whitespace of the first display line (this facility is switched off by default). For details see ntex- tIndent. o When the user navigates or selects text, Tcl/Tk sometimes needs to detect word boundaries. Ntext provides improved rules for word boundary detection. For details see ntextWordBreak. The remainder of this page describes the basic use and configuration of all three aspects of Ntext. For more detailed information on the different facilities of Ntext, see the pages ntextBindings, ntextIndent, and ntextWordBreak. See Section EXAMPLE for how to apply the Ntext binding tag in place of the Text binding tag. CONFIGURATION OPTIONS
Ntext provides alternatives to a number of behaviours of the classic Text binding tag. Where there is an option, the Ntext behaviour (except for display-line indentation) is switched on by default. The behaviour of Ntext may be configured application-wide by setting the values of a number of namespace variables: ::ntext::classicAnchor o 0 - (default value) selects Ntext behaviour, i.e. the anchor point is fixed o 1 - selects classic Text behaviour, i.e. the anchor point is variable ::ntext::classicExtras o 0 - (default value) selects Ntext behaviour, i.e. several traditional Text bindings are de-activated o 1 - selects classic Text behaviour, i.e. all Text bindings are activated ::ntext::classicMouseSelect o 0 - (default value) selects Ntext behaviour, i.e. the anchor point for mouse selection operations is moved by keyboard navigation o 1 - selects classic Text behaviour ::ntext::classicWordBreak o 0 - (default value) selects Ntext behaviour, i.e. platform-independent, two classes of word characters and one class of non-word characters. o 1 - selects classic Text behaviour, i.e. platform-dependent, one class of word characters and one class of non-word characters o After changing this value, the matching patterns should be recalculated. See ntextWordBreak for details and advanced configuration options. ::ntext::classicWrap o 0 - selects Ntext behaviour, i.e. display lines of text widgets in -wrap word mode are indented to match the initial whitespace of the first display line of a logical line. If the widget already holds text when this value is set, a function call may be neces- sary. See ntextIndent for detailed instructions on the use of Ntext 's indentation. o 1 - (default value) selects classic Text behaviour, i.e. no indentation ::ntext::overwrite o 0 - (initial value) text typed at the keyboard is inserted into the widget o 1 - text typed at the keyboard overwrites text already in the widget o The value is toggled by the Insert key. EXAMPLE
To create a text widget .t and use the Ntext bindings: package require ntext text .t bindtags .t {.t Ntext . all} See bindtags for more information. SEE ALSO
bindtags, ntextBindings, ntextIndent, ntextWordBreak, re_syntax, regexp, text KEYWORDS
bindtags, re_syntax, regexp, text ntext 0.81 ntext(n)
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