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Re: Excel 5 Encryption
> [email protected] (Ben Wern) writes:
> I was wondering if anyone out there has played with or 'broken' Microsloths
> encryption, especially in it's Excel from?
Accessdata of Orem Utah (1-800-658-5199) sells cracks for many of them.
So does John Kuslich (602-863-9274); I think his prices are lower.
I don't personally known or endorse either of 'em.
I append a message with some code for doing 4.0 -- I haven't tried it, and
don't know if it works for 5.0. It's in Basic, but I didn't perpetrate it.
Jim Gillogly
Mersday, 24 Solmath S.R. 1995, 01:05
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From: [email protected] (Alan Griffiths)
Subject: Re: Excel pass crack
Sender: [email protected] (NNTP News Poster)
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Approved: myself
Date: Wed, 21 Sep 1994 08:21:24 GMT
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Reply-To: [email protected] (Alan Griffiths)
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In <[email protected]>, Bob <[email protected]> writes:
>Someone was looking for a crack to excel's passwords, apparently they
>forgot their password ? Well I found these helpful tidbits posted
>previously.
>
>|>Encryption of Ms Excel files
>|> From: Fabio Ottolina <[email protected]>
>|> Date: 29 Jan 1994 12:51:18 GMT (1 screen)
>|>
>|> I have saved an Excel 4.0 for Windows file with password-protection, and
>|>I can't remember the password (how remarkably stupid! :-)).
>|>Is there any way to crack the password-protection of Excel files?
You may find the following program of help. I am sorry it's in QBasic but that's the
only free language I have at present. The program removes document protection from
Excel worksheets. I haven't tested it extensively so there are no guarantees or warranties.
Always keep a backup copy of your files etc...
The protection scheme does two things:
1. When you protect your document, Excel hashes your password to a 16 bit value, stores
it somewhere and sets a few flags to say that the document is protected.
2. When Excel saves a protected document it encrypts the content of each block using 16
different alphabetic substitutions. This allows Excel to read and display protected
documents before knowing their password. The program below unscrambles a protected
document, removes an extra 8 byte block at the beginning, and resets the flags and
passwords to zero.
I don't know if it can cope with all combinations of protection available in Excel. It
works fine on the simple protect document option. Similarly, charts etc. will probably
get munged since I don't think the titles etc get scrambled.
Hope this stuff is of use to someone. Alan.
PS. Ironically enough, I found Excel of great value in recovering the set of magic numbers
used in the program. It allowed me to very quickly generate and evaluate possible decryption
formulae!
-------------------cut here------------------------------
DECLARE FUNCTION decrypt$ (c$, adr&, blen%)
DEFINT A-Z
DIM SHARED magic(15)
FOR i = 0 TO 15
READ magic(i)
NEXT
DATA 196, 115, 164, 32, 60, 91, 212, 23, 240, 31, 40, 19, 240, 75, 180, 3
COLOR 14, 1
CLS
INPUT "Enter input Cyphertext filename: ", cf$
INPUT "Enter output Plaintext filename: ", pf$
OPEN pf$ FOR BINARY ACCESS WRITE AS #1
OPEN cf$ FOR BINARY ACCESS READ AS #2
chdr$ = INPUT$(18, #2)
phdr$ = LEFT$(chdr$, 10)
PUT #1, , phdr$
fp& = 10
cbh$ = INPUT$(4, #2)
WHILE NOT EOF(2)
PUT #1, , cbh$
blen = ASC(MID$(cbh$, 3, 1)) + 256 * ASC(MID$(cbh$, 4, 1))
btyp = ASC(MID$(cbh$, 1, 1)) + 256 * ASC(MID$(cbh$, 2, 1))
fp& = fp& + 4
IF blen > 0 THEN
cblk$ = INPUT$(blen, #2)
x$ = decrypt$(cblk$, fp& - 4, blen)
IF blen = 2 THEN
SELECT CASE btyp
CASE 18, 19, 99
x$ = STRING$(2, 0)
END SELECT
END IF
PUT #1, , x$
END IF
fp& = fp& + blen
cbh$ = INPUT$(4, #2)
WEND
CLOSE #1
CLOSE #2
END
FUNCTION decrypt$ (c$, adr&, blen)
offset = (adr& + blen) AND 15
d$ = STRING$(blen, 0)
FOR i = 1 TO blen
c = ASC(MID$(c$, i, 1))
crot = ((c * 8) MOD 256) OR (c \ 32)
ctst = magic(offset)
clss = (2 * (crot AND ctst)) AND 255
d = (256 + crot + ctst - clss) AND 255
MID$(d$, i, 1) = CHR$(d)
offset = (offset + 1) AND 15
NEXT
decrypt$ = d$
END FUNCTION
-------------------cut here------------------------------
Alan Griffiths CAA NERC Project [email protected]
Tel: +44-705-561325 Fax: +44-705-214094
All opinions expressed are my own and do not represent IBM in any way
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