A tool to spy on and control TTY sessions of SSH-connected clients with built-in keylogging and session recording.
SSHPry2.0 is a Python-based security tool that allows users to spy on and control the TTY sessions of SSH-connected clients. It provides capabilities like keylogging, session recording, and console-level phishing to monitor or manipulate terminal interactions in real-time.
Security researchers, penetration testers, and forensic analysts who need to inspect or interact with live SSH sessions for testing, auditing, or investigative purposes.
It offers a specialized, stealthy approach to SSH session surveillance with built-in features like keylogging and replay, making it a focused tool for terminal-level security assessments.
SSHPry v2 - Spy & Control os SSH Connected client's TTY
Open-Awesome is built by the community, for the community. Submit a project, suggest an awesome list, or help improve the catalog on GitHub.
Enables immediate manipulation of active SSH sessions for command execution and output alteration, as demonstrated in the linked YouTube demo.
Captures keystrokes within SSH sessions without external tools, enhancing stealth for security assessments per the README's feature list.
Saves terminal interactions for forensic analysis, useful for vulnerability demonstrations or reviewing past activities based on the README.
Simulates prompts to deceive users within terminals, adding a social engineering layer to its toolkit as highlighted in the features.
The blog post is from 2017 and no recent updates are mentioned, indicating potential lack of support for modern SSH versions or security patches.
README lacks detailed installation, configuration, or usage instructions, relying only on a single command and external links, hindering ease of use.
Designed for offensive security, misuse can lead to legal issues, and it lacks features for authorized use compliance or audit trails.
Single Python file with minimal dependencies listed, offering no integration options or community plugins compared to more established security tools.