Password Thief v1.0
Copyright (c) 1997 by Zoom. All rights reserved.

Have you ever saved a password in a program and 
then forgot it?

Well, now you can recover that password (even if
Microshaft would rather you couldn't!)

So the text box says "*******". What's that shit?
All you need to do is run the program then run
Password Thief. Select the windows title from the
top combo list. You can even use the find feature
to quickly locate it. If you can't find the window
name of the password protected text box, you might
have misread my directions and run Password Thief
and then the program. In that case you must press
the "Refresh Window Titles" button to re-detect
new windows opened after Password Thief's initial
scan on loading.

Let's say your retrieving your AOL password. You
would type "edit" in the find box and press enter
or the find button. By searching for that you
will find the "Edit Stored Passwords" window. You
then find the box you want to "UnMask". You do
this by selecting a item from the second combo
list. Most windows programs uses the words "Edit"
or "ThunderRTTextBox" to name text boxes. In AOL
they're named "_AOL_Edit" but you can figure that
out. Just select which one you want to UnMask.

My program lists most window items from top to
bottom. So if you wanted to UnMask the text box
nearest the bottom, you would chose the "Edit"
nearest the bottom of the second combo list.

The Refresh check box just makes the window you
retrieve the password from automatically refresh
when you get the password. If a program doesn't
like being refreshed, don't use it.

Good Luck and if you use this program to Thief
passwords from others' computers, you can pay
the price too. It ain't my fault. Anything that
makes things easier for society makes things
easier for the criminal element of that society.

If you have problems with certain programs or
have new ideas for future releases, you can
reach me at zoom@gnu.net! Also, check out my
homepage http://www.gnu.net/zoom/