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Microsoft Warns Customers Away From RC4 and SHA-1

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  • Microsoft Warns Customers Away From RC4 and SHA-1

    By Dennis Fisher

    The RC4 and SHA-1 algorithms have taken a lot of hits in recent years, with new attacks popping up on a regular basis. Many security experts and cryptographers have been recommending that vendors begin phasing the two out, and Microsoft on Tuesday said that is now recommending to developers that they deprecate RC4 and stop using the SHA-1 hash algorithm.

    RC4 is among the older stream cipher suites in use today, and there have been a number of practical attacks against it, including plaintext-recovery attacks. The improvements in computing power have made many of these attacks more feasible for attackers, and so Microsoft is telling developers to drop RC4 from their applications.

    “In light of recent research into practical attacks on biases in the RC4 stream cipher, Microsoft is recommending that customers enable TLS1.2 in their services and take steps to retire and deprecate RC4 as used in their TLS implementations. Microsoft recommends TLS1.2 with AES-GCM as a more secure alternative which will provide similar performance,” Microsoft’s William Peteroy said in a blog post.

    “One of the first steps in evaluating the customer impact of new security research and understanding the risks involved has to do with evaluating the state of public and customer environments. Using a sample size of five million sites, we found that 58% of sites do not use RC4, while approximately 43% do. Of the 43% that utilize RC4, only 3.9% require its use. Therefore disabling RC4 by default has the potential to decrease the use of RC4 by over almost forty percent.”

    The software company also is recommending that certificate authorities and others stop using the SHA-1 algorithm. Microsoft cited the existence of known collision attacks against SHA-1 as the main reason for advising against its use. Also, after January 2016, Microsoft developers can no longer use SHA-1 in code-signing or developer certificates.
    The Hackmaster

  • #2
    codebreaker the cheat device is one of software that uses RC4 and SHA-1 algorithms.
    Last edited by lee4; 11-13-2013, 06:44:20 AM.
    lee4 Does Not Accept Codes Requests !
    When lee4 asks a question it does not mean lee4 will look at your game
    *How to create and use SegaCD codes >click here<*
    >)

    Comment


    • #3
      Right and this is a huge concern because they had a serious need to protect all that sensitive information from prying eyes, and it wasn't like they distributed the decryption algorithm, or had decryption products stored in user-accessible memory or anything else that defeats the traditional purpose of encryption. If RC4 can be brute-forced, the CodeBreaker is doomed.

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      • #4
        lol Pyriel.

        The award for most sarcastic post of the year on gamehacking.org is yours!
        Missing LiquidManZero since 1685.

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