GHunt is an OSINT tool to extract information from any Google Account using an email.
It can currently extract:
- Owner's name
- Last time the profile was edited
- Google ID
- If the account is a Hangouts Bot
- Activated Google services (YouTube, Photos, Maps, News360, Hangouts, etc.)
- Possible YouTube channel
- Possible other usernames
- Public photos
- Phone models
- Phone firmwares
- Installed software
- Google Maps reviews
- Possible physical location
- 02/10/2020 : Since few days ago, Google return a 404 when we try to access someone's Google Photos public albums, we can only access it if we have a link of one of his albums.
Either this is a bug and this will be fixed, either it's a protection that we need to find how to bypass. - 03/10/2020 : Successfully bypassed. 🕺 (commit 01dc016)
It requires the "Profile photos" album to be public (it is by default)
You can build the Docker image with:
docker build --build-arg UID=$(id -u ${USER}) --build-arg GID=$(id -g ${USER}) -t ghunt .
Any of the scripts can be invoked through:
docker run -v $(pwd)/resources:/usr/src/app/resources -ti ghunt check_and_gen.py
docker run -v $(pwd)/resources:/usr/src/app/resources -ti ghunt hunt.py <email_address>
- Make sure you have Python 3.6.1+ installed. (I developed it with Python 3.8.1)
- Some Python modules are required which are contained in
requirements.txt
and will be installed below.
This project uses Selenium and automatically downloads the correct driver for your Chrome version.
In the GHunt folder, run:
python -m pip install -r requirements.txt
Adapt the command to your operating system if needed.
For the first run and sometimes after, you'll need to check the validity of your cookies.
To do this, run check_and_gen.py
.
If you don't have cookies stored (ex: first launch), you will be asked for the 4 required cookies. If they are valid, it will generate the Authentication token and the Google Docs & Hangouts tokens.
Then, you can run the tool like this:
python hunt.py myemail@gmail.com
- Log in to accounts.google.com
- After that, open the Dev Tools window and navigate to the Storage tab (Shift + F9 on Firefox) (It's called "Application" on Chrome)
If you don't know how to open it, just right-click anywhere and click "Inspect Element". - Then you'll find every cookie you need, including the 4 ones.
This tool is based on Sector's research on Google IDs and completed by my own as well.
If I have the motivation to write a blog post about it, I'll add the link here!