Category | Points | Difficulty |
---|---|---|
Crypto | 500 | Hard |
After extracting the file, we are given three files, crypt1.enc
, plain1.txt
, and sample.enc
. These files don't seem to be using anything special for encryption, so we can guess that we will need to XOR the files. XOR is a reversible way to encrypt stuff, and works mathematically like so: a ^ b = c
, and because it's reversible, we can say that c ^ b = a
. This can be applied to crypto like so: plain ^ key = encrypted
, and encrypted ^ key = plain
. We are given enough files to get a key: the decrypted and encrypted samples. Using XOR logic, we can say that plain1.txt ^ encrypted = key
, but we need a program to do that. Using this StackExchange answer, I derived the key, and used it again to get the plaintext of the crypt1.enc
file.
Flag: Full_Xor'd_Jacket_Private