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Quote from: bouncer123 on December 29, 2010, 10:44:25 pmQuote from: Double Hack on December 29, 2010, 09:50:59 pmAbout RSA hashes how do they work? Some servers make the RSA hash tied to the key and I would like to know what range RSA is based on or what system it uses.you already forgot my post from yesterday?Quote from: bouncer123 on December 28, 2010, 08:20:02 pmdouble hack, whats confusing you is the signature check enabled or not. the key has nothing to do with bin.pbo, its just included in the same packet.if a server has sig check enabled, you will see bin.pbo in the pakcet, if not - not. hope that confusion is gone now..Well, Apparently the bin.pbo hash has an RSA key and changing the cdhash with sigchecks (RSA is what they check) to a key other than the original results with "Invalid Authentication"
Quote from: Double Hack on December 29, 2010, 09:50:59 pmAbout RSA hashes how do they work? Some servers make the RSA hash tied to the key and I would like to know what range RSA is based on or what system it uses.you already forgot my post from yesterday?Quote from: bouncer123 on December 28, 2010, 08:20:02 pmdouble hack, whats confusing you is the signature check enabled or not. the key has nothing to do with bin.pbo, its just included in the same packet.if a server has sig check enabled, you will see bin.pbo in the pakcet, if not - not. hope that confusion is gone now..
About RSA hashes how do they work? Some servers make the RSA hash tied to the key and I would like to know what range RSA is based on or what system it uses.
double hack, whats confusing you is the signature check enabled or not. the key has nothing to do with bin.pbo, its just included in the same packet.if a server has sig check enabled, you will see bin.pbo in the pakcet, if not - not. hope that confusion is gone now..