10 Best Hacking Apps For Android

10 Best Hacking Apps For Android

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Hacking as a lot of positive use cases. You can use it to test the security of your network or see if someone is stealing your WiFi. Hollywood romanticizes hacking when it’s actually a fairly mundane activity. In most cases, you’re staring at a screen while a script or piece of software does the heavy lifting. Additionally, the vast majority deal with network security more than anything else. You can’t break someone’s Facebook password with an Android app. In any case, there are some good options for those who want a first hand experience with the topic. Here are the best hacking apps for Android. Many hacking apps break Google Play Store policies so the vast majority are only available as APK downloads.


AndroRAT


AndroRAT stands for Android Remote Administrative Tools. It’s a client-server app with the ability to manage an Android device remotely. You can see things like contacts, call logs, SMS, MMS, recent calls, and other private information. The runs as a service in the background at boot so once it’s installed, you don’t have to worry much about it. It’s a good way to gather information from an Android phone if you get it installed on a client device. You have to get the app from GitHub, but otherwise it seems to work pretty well


cSploit


cSploit is one of the more powerful hacking apps for Android. It’s a network tool that can do a bunch of stuff. It includes Metasploit framework out of the box and can do things like man-in-the-middle attacks, forge TCP and UDP packets, and other such things. It’s mostly useful for checking out security vulnerabilities on networks. The app is quite powerful but also comes with some drawbacks. You need a rooted device to use this app.


DroidSheep

DroidSheep is a network sniffer for WiFi networks. You open up the app and it starts sniffing activity on the network. You can intercept all kinds of Internet activity, including social media activity, web browsing, and other stuff. The UI is a little basic and a bit difficult to read if you’re not used to this sort of thing. However, it did work in our testing and showed me all of the active sessions on my WiFi network.


Hackode

Hackode is another networking toolkit with a bunch of neat and scary tools. You can get a lot of basic info like Whois info along with port scanning, traceroute, DNS and IP searches, and more. It specializes in penetration testing and other such things. Like most, the UI is super basic and occasionally difficult to read. However, you get a lot of info from the app, including stuff like WiFi passwords and such


Kali Nethunter

Kali NetHunter is a neat app, but it’s only available on a few devices. It was originally for the Nexus 5 and 7 devices but you can use it on some more modern devices. The app includes a bunch of functions, including wireless injection, an AP mode, and it can fun HID keyboard attacks. The app itself basically runs as an overlay on your device and picks up Internet traffic. It may not work for your device but Nexus 5 devices are cheap on eBay if you want to try it.


Network Mapper


Network Mapper is a rare hacking app available on the actual Google Play Store. This app serves as a frontend for the Nmap scanner. You basically install the app and you get the Nmap scanner process. It lets you check out open ports, protocols, hosts, services, and other such details about any network you connect to. The app runs the scan for you so it’s actually quite the hands off experience. It’s a bit out of date, so we also recommend checking out the official version here, but it’s nice to see a Google Play version for faster access.


NetX Network Tools Pro


NetX is a network analysis tool and it can pull down a bunch of information. Some of the info it can get includes IP address, MAC address, Bonjour name, NetBIOS name, Doman, the mobile network provider, signal strength, subnet mask, gateway, DNS, etc. You get the idea. This one even saves devices previously detected on the network in case they come back again. It won’t actually let you hack anything, but it can give you the information needed to do some penetration testing or other network testing. It’s also reasonably inexpensive.


zAnti

zAnti is apparently quite the popular network penetration tool. It basically scans networks and gives security managers a snapshot of potential network vulnerabilities. Of course, that means it can give it to anyone who needs it and also has the app. It basically just does a network scan and then pulls down a bunch of information about the network, including some potential exploits. The app can also scan for vulnerabilities from stuff like brute force attacks, man-in-the-middle attacks, DNS attacks, and more. It’s a bit old so it may not work on newer devices.


BugTroid

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Bugtroid is an innovative tool developed by the team of Bugtraq-Team. The main features of this apk, is that it has more than 200 Android and Linux tools (PRO) for pentesting and forensics through its Smarthphone or tablet


Andrax


ANDRAX is a penetration testing platform developed specifically for Android smartphones, ANDRAX has the ability to run natively on Android so it behaves like a common Linux distribution, But more powerful than a common distribution!




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