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So at my workplace, I have a .NET based web application, that has to pick up an encrypted parameter in a querystring.

Those supplying the encrypted string is an external contractor and they prefer (almost demand. cant change contractors though, the higher ups decide that stuff...), to use Microsoft's Crypto API to encrypt the string.

Well, fair enough, AFAIK I can decrypt that with C#, but after endless searching I am still at a loss on how it works.

That means I cant even supply example code, and I am stuck in this bind until I can decrypt this string.

What I have is:

I have the common password they encrypt with and I have to use to decrypt it with.

Encryption settings are: "CALC_AES_128" hash: "CALC_MD5". The string is encrypted, then hashed.

So I want to unhash it, and decrypt it.

I know its a lot to ask but how do I go about it?

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    You can't "unhash" (short of using rainbow tables, which I assume doesn't apply since it is presumably salted). That is like saying you want to "uncrop a photo". Normally, you compare the hash to what you get when you perform the same operation. Sep 5, 2013 at 7:13
  • +1 @MarcGravell A Hash where you can "unhash" is known technically in the Crypto business as a "Broken Hash".
    – Aron
    Sep 5, 2013 at 7:16
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    No, an md5 hash cannot be unhashed (except for rainbow tables). Let's put it this way: an MD5 hash is always 16 bytes, regardless of what you put in. If that could be unhashed, it would be the most awesome compression technology ever. You could watch a 10 hour HD movie from 16 bytes... Sep 5, 2013 at 7:17
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    1. Not possible physically, mathematically...maybe 2. Yes 3. Plaintext over HTTPS (make sure to turn off compression).
    – Aron
    Sep 5, 2013 at 7:39
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    Plaintext over https is fine. Just make sure that the client verifies the server's certificate. If your certificate verification accepts an attacker's certificate, they can intercept your connection. Sep 5, 2013 at 8:58

1 Answer 1

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Your external contractor doesn't know what he is talking about.

Hashes are used as a trap door function, a way to recognize something without been told what that thing IS. It is a digital fingerprint. The way a CRYPTOGRAPHICALLY SECURE hash is made, means even given the hash and the algorithm it is difficult to create an object that matches the fingerprint.

AES is a non-deterministic cypher. The non-determinisism comes from the Initialization Vector, which is meant to be a random number each time (not hard coded from a die roll, ahem Sony). This means for all intents and purposes, the output of AES is pure random (unless you have the key). Good cyphers are all designed to produce data that is statistically random (thus there is little data to form an attack from).

So by feeding data into a function that creates random data, then putting it into a trap door function, you have produce something that is truly difficult to decode (difficult in this sense is mathematically, you actually need more energy than exist in the universe to compute this).

As for how to send data across in a secure manner (secure as in against prying eyes on an unsecure network) in the query string? There is a well known protocol that .net supports that does this very well. Its called HTTPS.

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  • And there is no easy way to obscure the sensitive information?
    – Frederik T
    Sep 5, 2013 at 7:59
  • Each layer of encryption is going to provide inconvenience. The more secure it is the more inconvenience it will be. The point of security is it is inconvenient...The more bit of stuff needed to make it work...the more bits of stuff the attacker needs to attack the system.
    – Aron
    Sep 5, 2013 at 8:11
  • You could drop the HTTPS completely and have the contractor tunnel in via a VPN. That might be more secure... But if you need a full security system in place... as luck would have it I am open to contracts at the moment :P. But yeah...HTTPS should work fine...unless you don't trust your webserver or your contractor...in which case you are pretty screwed.
    – Aron
    Sep 5, 2013 at 8:13
  • Heh, well sorry, i dont have much to say in this matter. Either way, i have informed my superiors that their encryption suggestion is a no go and we have to go with HTTPS. I can longer into obscuring it later on, but thats just me personal beef.
    – Frederik T
    Sep 5, 2013 at 8:16
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    AES by itself is deterministic. It's a block-cipher, and thus just a keyed permutation. It's only a specific mode of operation that consumes the IV and introduces randomization. Sep 5, 2013 at 8:56

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