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@Kerlingen & Storm
I see the public key similar as below(but for my case, it's 2048bit), so whether means it's SSL Cert? If yes, whether have chance to break? Thanks. -----BEGIN PUBLIC KEY----- MIGfMA0GCSqGSIb3DQEBAQUAA4GNADCBiQKBgQDHikastc8+I81zCg/qWW8dMr8m qvXQ3qbPAmu0RjxoZVI47tvskYlFAXOf0sPrhO2nUuooJngnHV0639iTTEYG1vck NaW2R6U5QTdQ5Rq5u+uV3pMk7w7Vs4n3urQ6jnqt2rTXbC1DNa/PFeAZatbf7ffB By0IGO0zc128IshYcwIDAQAB -----END PUBLIC KEY----- Quote:
Sorry, I missed this post. Yes, I found the public key when did dynamic debug(thanks Storm's help). It's 2048bit RSA, I have verified the public key with manual caculation by bigcal tool for (m^e)mod(n), the public key is right. If use openssl RSA, not sure whether have chance to get the private key? From Storm: it is fully possible to find rsa signatures from memory http://www.trapkit.de/research/sslkeyfinder/keyfinder_v1.0_20060205.pdf , maybe have chance. Dear Storm, You have helped me a lots, in fact, the breakthrough comes from the article you recommended, thank you so much. :-) Last edited by mr.exodia; 08-09-2014 at 23:11. Reason: mered posts |
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