• Alaska phishing pupils take over classroom computers
    77 replies, posted
School doesn't disable access to the registry. That means you can go in, remove the registry entry that denies you access to the desktop options, and change your wallpaper. Teachers aren't able to change the wallpaper, which means that only people who know what registry key to change can change the wallpaper back. There was also a fun thing I found a while ago. We use an old typing program from 1997 for our keyboarding classes. Each account on the program has a password, even though I'm not sure why it's needed, and the password for the accounts is the same as the password for the student's account on the computer system. Passwords are saved, very badly encrypted, on a publicly accessible drive. I now have the passwords for 169 students. All the passwords are stuff like "master4" and "bright1", though someone has the password "snodawg0". Having the passwords to other students means I could fuck up the computers and they'd get in trouble. I'm not that much of a dick, but I know a few kids who would do that :v:
Oh damn, we used to do the same thing when I went to Schoenbar to get around that goofy security nonsense after they started to catch on to proxies. Honest to god, this school has had this going on for years.
[QUOTE=lintz;40513858]I think everyone tried this at one point.[/QUOTE] Not me, I was homeschooled.
At my higschool, you needed to enter a password to install any software. Well, the password was extremely easy to guess as well as the user. It was just "Highschoolname" and the pass was just "Student". Quake and Counter Strike now flow from computer to computer and small LAN partys happen.
UT was so great on our engineering classes computers. the teacher would just tell us to make blueprints CAD and he would sit down at his desk. i wonder if he got suspicious when we would brag to each other about getting a kill, or being top of the scoreboard.
I got the IT guy from my highschool to give me the WiFi password. I then immediately tried to get into the admin configuration of the router, and discovered the admin password had not been changed. I changed the SSID to "shitting dicknipples" and it managed to stay like that for at least three days. The IT dude had no idea how to change it and so he shut down the wifi router for a month or so until they got it fixed.
I've never seriously messed with school computers, but I know if you open notepad and save as it drops you in the WINDOWS directory. Kinda wanna see what I can do from there.
[QUOTE=Chronische;40524790]Some dude managed to put UT 2004 and Warcraft 3 onto the school network, so people in the know could play that shit on LAN whenever they had a computer class.[/QUOTE] Someone at my highschool did that, maybe we went to the same one?
[QUOTE=supersnail11;40531791]School doesn't disable access to the registry. That means you can go in, remove the registry entry that denies you access to the desktop options, and change your wallpaper. Teachers aren't able to change the wallpaper, which means that only people who know what registry key to change can change the wallpaper back. There was also a fun thing I found a while ago. We use an old typing program from 1997 for our keyboarding classes. Each account on the program has a password, even though I'm not sure why it's needed, and the password for the accounts is the same as the password for the student's account on the computer system. Passwords are saved, very badly encrypted, on a publicly accessible drive. I now have the passwords for 169 students. All the passwords are stuff like "master4" and "bright1", though someone has the password "snodawg0". Having the passwords to other students means I could fuck up the computers and they'd get in trouble. I'm not that much of a dick, but I know a few kids who would do that :v:[/QUOTE] Windows passwords are usually pretty much redundant because of all the free skiddy tools that can crack them when booted from usb.
This reminds me when my friend accessed some teacher's computer and found porn on it
[QUOTE=MegaErathia;40515962]It's also just possible to reset the default admin-accounts with UltimateBootCD, good times with that also.[/QUOTE] shouldn't work if they don't use local accounts really. That said I still remember how in high school I had logins for most of the teachers and some good 20 students or so.
Ah man we used to use the teachers account to remotely turn off people's computers, put porn on while they went to print something off etc. one time a kid was playing games so we locked his computer and made a message come up telling him to go to the head teachers office for disciplinary action and he burst out crying and left heh
I remember my friend actually installed keyloggers on a majority of the computers in our school. It was never detected and we had pretty much everyones password. It was great, although our small group of friends got [I]extremely cautious[/I] when dealing with entering passwords. Also this thread has taught me every school has at least one kid who installs keyloggers or steals passwords via makeshift ways.
Never really bothered finding out too much, but I know for a fact that there is one admin account at my school that has no password. I don't really care enough to find out the username of it though, I just use the wifi on my transformer.
Administrator didn't have a password on our school system. Seriously, just left it blank. She was an assholish bitch too and nobody liked her
my school of 3000+ constantly had lans of 1.6 happening, there was always a server with at least 20 people :v: One day a teacher left his login on so I copied counter strike and boss key (the best thing to use to hide the fact you are playing a game when a teacher looks at your comp) onto a public drive, 4 years later I asked my little sister to check and its still there :v: [editline]6th May 2013[/editline] Oh yea I also put keylogggers on multiple computers, was well funny I remember some dudes neopets password was "2cool4school" made me laugh [editline]6th May 2013[/editline] [QUOTE=Cows Rule;40537118]I've never seriously messed with school computers, but I know if you open notepad and save as it drops you in the WINDOWS directory. Kinda wanna see what I can do from there.[/QUOTE] I used to delete hall32.dll, restart the comp and tell the teacher that the computer crashed and its not working anymore to get out of work when the computer room was full.
[QUOTE=Omali;40515842]Changing your grades is one of those things in school that if you get caught (and you are very likely to be), you can fuck over your whole future. [/QUOTE] In the UK grades mean absolutely nothing until year 10, he said he was in year 8 so he may be suspended, but it won't fuck over your whole future. If you can change the grades that matter (those are all marked and stored centrally) then you will either go to jail or be employed by the secret service.
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