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Hands-On Cryptography with Python

Hands-On Cryptography with Python

By : Samuel Bowne
3.8 (4)
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Hands-On Cryptography with Python

Hands-On Cryptography with Python

3.8 (4)
By: Samuel Bowne

Overview of this book

Cryptography is essential for protecting sensitive information, but it is often performed inadequately or incorrectly. Hands-On Cryptography with Python starts by showing you how to encrypt and evaluate your data. The book will then walk you through various data encryption methods,such as obfuscation, hashing, and strong encryption, and will show how you can attack cryptographic systems. You will learn how to create hashes, crack them, and will understand why they are so different from each other. In the concluding chapters, you will use three NIST-recommended systems: the Advanced Encryption Standard (AES), the Secure Hash Algorithm (SHA), and the Rivest-Shamir-Adleman (RSA). By the end of this book, you will be able to deal with common errors in encryption.
Table of Contents (5 chapters)
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Challenge 2 – cracking many-round hashes

After a review of how MD5 and SHA work in Python, we will see what a many round hash is, and then you will get two challenges to solve.

MD5 and SHA are both easy to calculate:

From the hashlib library, you just need to use the hashlib.new method and put the name of the algorithm in the first parameter, the password in the second parameter, and then add the hex-digest to it to see the actual result in hexadecimal instead of just an address to the object. To do many rounds, you just repeat that process.

You need to put the password in h and then use the current h, to calculate the next h and repeat this over and over and over. Here's a little script that prints out the first 10 rounds of a multi-round MD5 hash:

This technique is called stretching, and it's used by stronger password hashing routines, such as the Linux password...

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