{"id":428,"date":"2007-03-01T06:50:30","date_gmt":"2007-03-01T06:50:30","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.darknet.org.uk\/2007\/03\/a-collection-of-web-backdoors-shells-cmdasp-cmdjsp-jsp-reverse-php-backdoor\/"},"modified":"2015-09-09T19:40:19","modified_gmt":"2015-09-09T11:40:19","slug":"a-collection-of-web-backdoors-shells-cmdasp-cmdjsp-jsp-reverse-php-backdoor","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.darknet.org.uk\/2007\/03\/a-collection-of-web-backdoors-shells-cmdasp-cmdjsp-jsp-reverse-php-backdoor\/","title":{"rendered":"A Collection of Web Backdoors & Shells – cmdasp cmdjsp jsp-reverse php-backdoor"},"content":{"rendered":"
Michael Daw has collected some WEB backdoors to exploit vulnerable file upload facilities and others. It’s a pretty useful library for a variety of situations, especially for those doing web application security audits and web app security.<\/p>\n
Understanding how these backdoors work can also help security administrators implement firewalling and security policies to mitigate obvious attacks.<\/p>\n
All these backdoors are publicly available. They have simply been packaged them together into wbc-v1.tar.gz.<\/p>\n
The package includes:<\/p>\n
Filename Fizesize MD5\r\ncmd-asp-5.1.asp 1200 8baa99666bf3734cbdfdd10088e0cd9f\r\ncmdasp.asp 1526 57b51418a799d2d016be546f399c2e9b\r\ncmdjsp.jsp 725 b815611cc39f17f05a73444d699341d4\r\njsp-reverse.jsp 2451 8b0e6779f25a17f0ffb3df14122ba594\r\nphp-backdoor.php 2800 2b5cb105c4ea9b5ebc64705b4bd86bf7\r\nsimple-backdoor.php 328 f091d1b9274c881f8e41b2f96e6b9936<\/pre>\n