26-04-2015, 09:20 PMRepentance Wrote:26-04-2015, 09:11 PMSozin Wrote:26-04-2015, 08:56 PMRepentance Wrote:26-04-2015, 02:24 PMSozin Wrote: Any hash is crackable via Bruteforce.
Its not really the hash you should care about, you should focus on prevention of BruteForcing.
Mission impossible, there's no brute forcer on the market that can reverse this.
You'd need to make a custom one and even then, it'd be really hard to decrypt.
Unless you have the source too. (Of the one using it)
Dude, do you know what a bruteforcer is? LOL
Well, I'd call hashcat as an example. It has a bruteforce function with mode 3.
But the hash isn't symmetric.
abc -> amoned
abc -> pdaxon
that means each time i hash abc, i get a different hash?