I am encrypted. Solve me.
DiCC9THQ2ZQ9e7Nm0U6+cdg=
it says ur a fag
ur gay pwned
>>56409636
>encrypted
doubt
>>56409636
hi encrypted, i'm dan. we maybe talked on omegle.
>>56409906
We did not.
>>56409636
seriously though, i can't decode base64 to hex. Or even hex to base64 this is driving me nuts.
Only way i can think of, in C, is just make some sort of arrays that'll act as table over binary and convert like that. (3 hex digits at a time and then with the 12 bits i take 6 to get a base64 char and append to the converted string.)
But i can only show it with a printf. I mean it's an array of char.
I can't grasp the idea, i think i'm doing something wrong. What if i need to use the base64 string for something, i only have a string.. Maybe it's ok, i'm to much of a noob to know, but it feels like i'm not doing it right.
Are you working with raw bytes if it's a string ? Man i'm pretty sure i'm dumb
>>56410028
You are at a CS101 level of knowledge. Think about the datatype it is being represented as then work from there (understanding how the type is stored in memory(8 or 16 bit for example))
Have you done any other simpler conversions in a programming language? Try bin<->dec, or maybe something to ASCII(char). I tried to roll an insecure obfuscation message sending program way back when I barely even understood the syntax of C++ and hacked together something, and I am not even average in terms of talent, I just know how to break down problems into smaller, solvable/searchable problems
Obviously you can cast the different types so that shouldn't be the challenge
You aren't dumb, once you understand how it works it becomes trivial is all
>>56410190
>ave you done any other simpler conversions in a programming language?
I have done hex to bin and string to hex, but it was using strings with a switch table and printf for string to hex...
I'm going to look into doing a bin<->dec without a comparison table or string formatting.
>>56410028base64 -d <<< "DiCC9THQ2ZQ9e7Nm0U6+cdg=" | hexdump -C
>>56410190
>You aren't dumb, once you understand how it works it becomes trivial is all
I don't know... For example, i wanted to do something really simple. Like char to dec. And rapidly i got it that they're the same thing, you can see it on the ascii table and in C ('G' == 71) is true.
But i still don't get it, if the char is a representation of that number, it's the same thing but if somehow i want to convert it i don't see how to do it other than using printf or having a comparison table. But maybe also because it's not really a conversion
Possible Hint? Distraction? You decide.
key:
e7461605-8882-4455-b9b9-d703dcca475d
>>56411121
What's the prize?
>>56409636
dear sean...
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y6tbX2tlqvg
>>56411147
$25.00 Gift Card to Amazon