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hi All
This Pass Save In My Table.
How To Find What Hash?
Thanks So much
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Sergey Alexandrovich Kryukov 20-Feb-13 14:59pm    
The whole idea to restore a password is absolute abuse. I explained the technical and ethical aspects of it, and the ethical aspect is the most important here.
—SA
bbirajdar 25-Feb-13 9:40am    
Hurrey ...I succeeded in rehashing the password above..Don't ask him how.. Prove me wrong and I bet 1000 bucks.... The rehashed word is - 'iam2dumb2baswdev'

If you mean "Can we tell what was hashed to produce this?" then the answer is "no". Hashes are designed to be one-way - you cannot regenerate the original input from teh hashed value.
 
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Seyed Ahmad Mirzaee 23-Feb-13 14:54pm    
Beacuse some of Software for Example:HashCat GUI Can Rehash This.
Rehash? I hope that some appropriate cryptographic hash function was used. It makes it cryptographically infeasible to restore the password from the hash function; this is the whole point of such functions:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cryptographic_hash_function[^].

Even if we could restore the password, it would be unethical. No one has any right to know any password except the users who created them for themselves, no matter what access or privileges you may have. A password is meant to be a totally private entity. The normal practice is to reset the password, never knowing what it was before. After reset, the user is supposed to change it. Only this way, never anything else.

—SA
 
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Maciej Los 20-Feb-13 16:21pm    
Agree, absolutly unethical!
+5
Sergey Alexandrovich Kryukov 20-Feb-13 18:58pm    
Thank you, Maciej.
—SA
Valery Possoz 20-Feb-13 17:46pm    
Point well made! There are things that are off-limits... 5
Sergey Alexandrovich Kryukov 20-Feb-13 18:59pm    
Thank you, Valery.
—SA

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