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Is there any way to decrypt the encrypted MD5 string, given the key.

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encrypted with what? md5 is hashing, not encrypting. – SilentGhost Oct 13 at 18:25
MD5 hash is a one-way function. – Andrey Vlasovskikh Oct 13 at 18:46
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While the premise of the question is flawed (A hash is "a one way trip" i.e. it is not a bijective function, and also it doesn't involve a key, only an input message) the responses go beyond stating that "this is not what a hash is for" and explore ways of finding messages that satisfy one particular hash value, and ways of protecting against dictionary/brute-force attacks with the use of salt. Interesting ! – mjv Oct 13 at 18:59
@mjv not being bijective is not the property that makes md5 a "cryptographic hash function". for instance f = x*x is not bijective but it is not "a one way trip" because if i said that f(x)=4 you would know that x would either be -2 or 2 that does not happen with cryptographic hashing functions. hope i was clear ;) – João Portela Oct 13 at 22:21

5 Answers

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Message-Digest algorithm 5 is a widely-used cryptographic hash function with a 128-bit hash value. Encryption has 2 way : encrypt - decript , hash has one way - there is no decryption possible. BUT with database hash IS POSSIBLE to solve this issue.

See this sites :

www.rednoize.com – 50,709,274 Hash in database

www.md5oogle.com – 6,353,625 Hash in database

www.hashmash.com – 1,611,191 Hash in database

www.gdataonline.com 1,155,613 Hash in database

www.md5decryption.com – 872,145 Hash in database

www.md5decrypter.com – 583,441 Hash in database

www.md5decrypter.co.uk – 41,568,541 Hash in database

www.macrosoftware.ro – 5,403 Hash in database

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vote up 2 vote down

Try Google (see Using Google To Crack MD5 Passwords) or an online DB of MD5 hashes like md5(); or GDATA (the last one contains 1,133,766,035 unique entries).

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vote up 1 vote down

md5 is not a encryption algorithm it is a hashing algorithm. Read up on MD5 and Crytographic Hash Functions.

Do create a MD5 hash of a string in python you do as follows:

import hashlib
m = hashlib.md5()
m.update("String to Hash")
echo m.digest()
# '\xed\xa5\x8bA-nU\xa2\xee\xbb[_s\x130\xbd'
echo m.hexdigest() # its more common to show hashes as a hex string
# 'eda58b412d6e55a2eebb5b5f731330bd'
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vote up 15 vote down

MD5 is a one-way hash. It cannot be decrypted. The closest thing to decrypting an MD5 hash would be to do a lookup against a pre-generated rainbow table. Also, I'm not sure what you mean by "I have the key". There is no "key" in an MD5 hash. Perhaps you are thinking of a salt? If your data has a salt value incorporated prior to hashing, the rainbow table approach probably won't be practical anyway.

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Nitpick: Salt isn't an acronym. :) – Nick Johnson Oct 13 at 19:12
I agree, please make it lowercase; it implies there's some special meaning to the word. – amdfan Oct 13 at 19:21
Wow, two nitpicks about case and 0 fixes. :::Fixes::: – Brian Oct 13 at 19:25
@Brian: Thanks for fixing the case. I would have done it but I was out to lunch! – Asaph Oct 13 at 20:17
vote up 2 vote down

MD5 is an asymmetric hash -- not an encryption mechanism. You can't "decrypt" an MD5. If you know the hashed contents are limited to a (short) set of possibilities, you can use a Rainbow Table to attempt to brute-force reverse the hash, but this will not work in the general case.

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