ok in school last year our class would fool around with net send. . .but our computer teacher disabled it this year and I have been trying to re enable it but I always get something like error 5 'no permission' or something like that. . . the PCS are on XP By the way/ / /
ok so I already tried some programs, going to services (they both get error 5) and I even tried booting into safe mode but even when I boot into safe mode the PC still boots into the user log-in scree ( the type where you have to type the user name and password, since wee are a WHOLE school and ~300 per grade)
I already tried login in as administrator with no pass but it won't let me. .
so if this is possible please help
It's possible if you know how to gain administrator access. Otherwise, you really have little chance.
And, most admins aren't so stupid not to set an administrator password...
Is it really worth the effort for net send though? (though you can do many better things with admin privileges)
I have a tool that can change the administartor password to whatever you want.
I`ll create a bootable iso you can burn to cd and use if you`d like. (it`s small)
Only downside is that eventually someone will realize it has been changed...
damn no they don't have cd drives on the PC's / / . . and I don't want to get in trouble with the principle. she is jabba the hut and she can eat me alive. . .
so I just want a easy simple way to do this
MaDc0w Wrote:I have a tool that can change the administartor password to whatever you want.
I`ll create a bootable iso you can burn to cd and use if you`d like. (it`s small)
If you can gain access to intercepting the boot sequence, then dumping the password is probably better - takes longer, but much safer, plus gains you local admin access to all computers over the school (I doubt they'd have different passwords for each computer :P).
diego, there's no "easy" way.
If you can intercept the boot process, ie boot from a floppy or USB (or gain access to the BIOS and change it from there) then you can get in.
i can access bios. but how do I change password from there?
ZB meant if you can access the bios you can set boot from floppy/usb and use a password sniffing app :)
You can`t chsnge a users password from bios..
diego Wrote:i can access bios. but how do I change password from there?
What? They don't have a BIOS password? They must be like, really dumb...
Well, if you can access and change the BIOS settings, here's the procedure:
- Change the boot order - how will depend on what BIOS they use. Change it so that you can intercept the boot order (ie prioritize booting from a floppy over booting from the harddrive)
- Once you'd done that, you'll need to make the boot floppy or USB - you'll need to include the necessary tools (from memory, mainly NTFSDOS and SAMDUMP)
- Boot up with your boot medium, run NTFSDOS so that you can access the harddrives from DOS, then use SAMDUMP to dump the password hashes
- Restart the computer - if you want, you can restore the BIOS boot order
- That's all you do with the target computer - if done correctly, no-one should know that you've done anything to it. Go to http://loginrecovery.com/ and upload your password hash file
- Wait about 2 days for it to process it - once done, it'll give you the admin password.
EDIT:
http://loginrecovery.com/ also has a program to make a bootable floppy which has the necessary stuff.
http://www.chicagotech.net/systemerrors.ht Wrote:System error 5 - Access is denied
This is a permission issue. If the net view command fails with a "System error 5 has occurred. Access is denied." message, 1) make sure you are logged on using an account that has permission to view the shares on the remote computer.
2) Need to cache credential: logon the same username and password on both computers or use net net use \\computername /user:username command.
3) Make sure the Netlogon service is running.
just so you know what error 5 is....
cool thanks! but it will take 2 days?!?!?!