I tried, consider all encodings.

4d44a0817b3718d14 

Can you tell me what the encoding is for? It looks like md5 combining some numbers and letters, but not decrypted.

ReinRaus Read the comments ... Gorets If I didn’t write that it was the bank that wrote the code for the toy, you would guess by morning, but for the sake of confidentiality, the pro-inspectors would ask the question “Where did this code from” checking who wrote it, and if the answer was as if this is some kind of state institution, just close your eyes on it, say as if you can't decipher ... You don’t get into this jungle because you’re afraid, but it’s scary and interesting at the same time what is it?

People, well, honestly, if anyone really knows what it is and is afraid to write a page here, the page in search engines is indexed, write me here seniarsen@mail.ru, after reading honestly delete the letter ...

Closed due to the fact that the essence of the issue is not clear to the participants fori1ton , Andrei Arshinov , DeKaNszn , VenZell , petya May 8 '15 at 11:37 .

Try to write more detailed questions. To get an answer, explain what exactly you see the problem, how to reproduce it, what you want to get as a result, etc. Give an example that clearly demonstrates the problem. If the question can be reformulated according to the rules set out in the certificate , edit it .

  • 2
    I think this is sha100500, try the function sha100500_lol_decode (), I think this is what you are looking for - Zowie
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    shhhhhh ... And the author has a bit of irony, though I sympathize if he is not joking :). "You are not lezetti in this jungle because you are afraid, but it’s scary and interesting at the same time what is it?" Yeah, country letter ... "I’ll honestly delete the letter after reading" And it’s better before reading. - Baran
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    Naturally, therefore, we can assume the simplest version of hex -> dec. - avp 8:49 pm
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    I wish I could see the creation that produces this sequence of 8.5 bytes. @Programist Syvorov, describe in detail what and where you did, what and where you got it from. No one will ever keep a code, password or pin on the cards, especially banking ones, no matter what you call it. - Dex
  • 2
    Aah, this is a super secret start code! Sutulov Arsenty 1993 r / r, for you already ohotwitz Mossad! - karmadro4

1 answer 1

This is really very similar to the md5 hash. The problem here is that the hash is an irreversible conversion of a string to another string. The key word is irreversible. That is, the same hash can theoretically have an infinite number of other lines.

All so-called methods of handling hash - based on the fact that the user could enter some kind of digestible string similar to a real word or phrase, number, and so on. Mass methods - ranging from brute-force to rainbow table

Go to the antichat forums - there are a lot of craftsmen poking around in the hashes of their handling and so on.

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    Not enough bytes in the source phrase for md5 - neoascetic
  • With rainbow tables in 2TB for 64-bit A5 / 1 key, I can not even imagine the necessary volumes for md5. - Dex
  • md5 128-bit prints a string of 32 hex, and here they are 17 (68-bit) - avp