H11 Digital Forensics.com
Rainbow Table MS Office

MS Office 97 and 2000 derive a 40-bit encryption key from a user-supplied password. Our rainbow tables recover that 40-bit key in typically less than one minute. Once the key has been recovered, the document can be decrypted.
AccessData Rainbow Tables MS Office
How to Recover Cryptographic Keys with Rainbow Tables
Rainbow tables are pre-computed, brute-force attacks. In cryptography, a brute-force attack is an attempt to recover a cryptographic key or password by trying every possible combination until the correct one is found. How quickly this can be done depends on the size of the key, and the computing resources applied.
A system set at 40-bit encryption has one trillion keys available. A brute-force attack of 500,000 keys per second would take approximately 25 days to exhaust the key space combinations using a single 3 Ghz Pentium 4 computer. With a Rainbow Table, you can decrypt 40-bit encrypted files in seconds or minutes rather than days or weeks. Click here for additional information about Rainbow Tables.
Recover MS Office Cryptographic Keys
AccessData has three types of rainbow tables:
- MS Office
- Adobe PDF
- Windows LAN hash
This version of Rainbow Tables only operates with MS Office.
MS Office 97 and 2000 derive a 40-bit encryption key from a user-supplied password. Our rainbow tables recover that 40-bit key in typically less than one minute. Once the key has been recovered, the document can be decrypted.
DNA and PRTK
DNA 3.2 and PRTK 6.2 seamlessly integrates with Rainbow Tables.
Hard Disk Space Needed to Recover Cryptographic Keys
Since rainbow tables store the result from every possible key test, they are typically very large. Each of our three Rainbow Tables is just under three (2.7) terabytes. The first two tables provide a key with which to open an encrypted file. The third provides the actual password.
