diff --git a/README.md b/README.md index 9e9cbbb..a18ade7 100644 --- a/README.md +++ b/README.md @@ -3,10 +3,10 @@ <img src="https://img.shields.io/badge/Maintained%3F-Yes-23a82c"> ## Purpose -psudohash is a password generator that imitates certain commonly used password creation patterns that humans use, like substituting a word's characters with symbols or numbers, using char-case variations, adding a common padding before or after the word etc. It is keyword-based and highly customizable. +psudohash is a password generator that imitates certain password creation patterns commonly used by humans, like substituting a word's letters with symbols or numbers, using char-case variations, adding a common padding before or after the word and more. It is keyword-based and highly customizable. ### Pentesting Corporate Environments -System administrators and employees tend to use the Company's name (or a subset of the name) as password for Wi-Fi access points, network devices and application or even domain accounts. With the company's name as input and the most basic options, psudohash will produce a wordlist with all possible character substitution and case variations and more. Take a look at the following example: +System administrators and employees tend to use the Company's name (or a subset of the name) as password for Wi-Fi access points, network devices and application or even domain accounts. With the company's name as input and the most basic options, psudohash will produce a wordlist with all possible character substitution, char-case variations and more. Take a look at the following example:  The script includes a basic character substitution schema. You can add/modify character substitution patterns by edditing the source and following the data structure presented below (default): @@ -23,7 +23,7 @@ transformations = [ ] ``` ### Individuals -When it comes to people, i think we all have (more or less) set passwords using a mutation of one or more words that mean something to us, like our name or wife/kid/pet/band names, sticking the year we were born at the end or maybe a super secure padding like "!@#". Well, guess what? +When it comes to people, i think we all have (more or less) set passwords using a mutation of one or more words that mean something to us e.g., our name or wife/kid/pet/band names, sticking the year we were born at the end or maybe a super secure padding like "!@#". Well, guess what? 