- Joined
- Jan 4, 2017
- Messages
- 431 (0.14/day)
- Location
- Ohio
Hi everyone. Long story short, my elderly aunt and uncle were victims of a phone scam in which their financial information and computer were compromised. Luckily, the bank froze their accounts and credit files just in time.
I am tasked with trying to fix the smoking wreckage of a computer they have. Apparently, the scammer had my uncle allow remote access to his desktop and the scammer went to town. My first hurdle is that the scammer set up a windows syskey password. I have never seen this before to be quite honest. I learned that basically, the scammer encrypts the SAM database, which renders any password cracker useless (IE Hirens Boot CD, my go to in this situation). I was able to boot a live USB of Linux mint and copy some of their data over to a flash drive. I'm not sure what the scammer did to their pictures, but none of them will open. They have the proper file extension (jpeg) but bark at me that "the registry value is invalid" or something along those lines.
My gut tells me to blow away the OS and re-install windows 10 on it, but my morbid curiosity wants to know what that scumbag scammer did to this installation.
So tl;dr, any way to get past a syskey password?
Also, lol Microsoft will be getting rid of syskey because of ransomware and scammers in the creators update.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Syskey
I am tasked with trying to fix the smoking wreckage of a computer they have. Apparently, the scammer had my uncle allow remote access to his desktop and the scammer went to town. My first hurdle is that the scammer set up a windows syskey password. I have never seen this before to be quite honest. I learned that basically, the scammer encrypts the SAM database, which renders any password cracker useless (IE Hirens Boot CD, my go to in this situation). I was able to boot a live USB of Linux mint and copy some of their data over to a flash drive. I'm not sure what the scammer did to their pictures, but none of them will open. They have the proper file extension (jpeg) but bark at me that "the registry value is invalid" or something along those lines.
My gut tells me to blow away the OS and re-install windows 10 on it, but my morbid curiosity wants to know what that scumbag scammer did to this installation.
So tl;dr, any way to get past a syskey password?
Also, lol Microsoft will be getting rid of syskey because of ransomware and scammers in the creators update.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Syskey