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fkn0wned.com · Server & Computer Security

FkNCrypter Public — inSpired's FUD Crypter Release Thread

A member releases his own crypter to earn a spot on the security team, and the whole forum shows up to test it live.

In this Server & Computer Security thread, member inSpired released 'FkNCrypter,' a homemade file-crypting tool, partly as an informal audition for the site's Security Crew. Founder TuxifieD reopened the thread and vouched for it publicly while inviting members to debug/scan it, sparking a back-and-forth of virus-scan reports, sandbox results, and reassurances about whether the tool was safe or backdoored. The thread shows the classic 'cheat scene' crypter-release ritual: version updates, changelogs, credit lists, and community members testing detection rates against 2009-era antivirus engines. It's a good time capsule of the site's tech/security subculture and the trust dynamics around homemade tools.

REOPENNED: InSpired is trying out for the security team, feel free to debug his application but I have no reason to believe he would post a backdoored application— TuxifieD
If this work , you have my vote to be on the team! Also , can any1 confirm it works— DvS
ZOMG thanks dawg!— xfallout
inSpiredTuxifieDPatienceeDvSfkngamesBotoxx
crypterfudsecurity-crewantivirus-scanstool-releasemalware-tools

SQL Injection [[Scanner]] — f0wh's Tool Drop

A skiddie-tier SQLi scanner share that pulled twenty 'thx bro' replies and one blunt reality check.

In this Server & Computer Security thread from late September/October 2009, longtime member f0wh posted a download for an SQL injection scanner tool behind hidden content (unlock-by-reply). The thread quickly filled with the classic forum ritual of members posting 'thanks'/'unhide' just to unlock the download, spanning regulars, VIPs, and a couple of later-banned accounts. Amid the pile of low-effort thank-yous, a couple of more security-savvy members pushed back, calling the tool basic and skiddie-oriented rather than anything sophisticated.

Thanks, but so skiddie.— XpliciteR
thanks for the post but suffers from standard scanner issues— rawrsec
f0whXpliciteRrawrsecBotoxxlam3rap3x
sql-injectionsecurity-toolsdownloadstech-securityhacking-tools2009

8 Antivirus for USB Flash Drives

A portable antivirus toolkit for your USB stick — 2010's answer to walking into any infected computer prepared.

A quick resource-sharing post by longtime poster m1sterfopje in the Server & Computer Security section, bundling eight portable antivirus/scanner tools (Ad-Aware, Avira, Avast, McAfee, NOD32, ClamWin, Trend Micro, Dr.Web) into one no-install USB toolkit. Typical of the era's utility-sharing threads, it was gated behind a 'reply to see hidden content' wall, a common trick to farm replies and post counts. Got a one-line thank-you reply and little else — a small, functional piece of the forum's tech/security corner rather than a dramatic one.

Thanks Bro— PurePwnage99
m1sterfopjePurePwnage99
antivirususb-toolstech-securitysoftware-sharinghidden-content

[Req] Test dummie/bot for a exe, will remove instantly.

One VIP, one mystery .exe, and a request nobody wanted to touch too closely.

A short, single-post request in the Server & Computer Security subforum where user S3RK, a VIP member since mid-2007, asked if anyone could run an .exe file on a spare machine or bot to check whether it was being flagged, believing it to be 'FUD' (undetected by antivirus). The thread got no visible replies, capturing a very typical low-key moment of the forum's security/black-hat corner rather than any major saga.

I need someone to run a .exe on a bot or something so I can see whether it's working or not. I believe it's FUD.— S3RK
S3RK
securityfudtestingvip-membertech-security-board

10 Security Enhancements

An old-school PC security checklist from the days of ZoneAlarm, WEP, and Outlook Express.

VIP member m1sterfopje posted a basic ten-point PC security guide covering Windows/Office updates, firewalls, spyware blockers, strong passwords, antivirus software, wireless security (WEP/MAC filtering), and general skepticism about email and phishing. It's a fairly generic, dated 'best practices' list typical of early Windows XP-era security advice rather than anything scene-specific. The thread sits in the Server & Computer Security subforum under Tech & Security, with no replies recorded, alongside a site-wide banner promoting public giveaways of steam accounts and rapidshare loot.

Be skeptical of things on the Internet. Don't assume that e-mail 'From:' a particular person is actually from that person until you have further reason to believe it's that person.— m1sterfopje
m1sterfopje
securitytutorialwindows-xp-eraantivirusfirewalltech-support