|
| |||||
| Home | Reviews | Tools | Forums | FAQs | Find Service | ISP News | Maps | About |
how-to block ads |
General Questions
Download Install and Setup1 General Questions
Full Details on the Secret Key Challenge can be found here. Distributed.net's website here.
by PinHead That's it! by Gomez You must request a password by going to the distrubuted.net stats page (»stats.distributed.net/projects.p···ect_id=8) and looking up your address in the 'Participant Stats' field. by Gomez It's great that some people can crunch 1000's per day for their team, but the top teams are made of thousands of people making small contributions. by Gomez That's very common these days. First let's note that the project is running on non-specialized machines, using idle time. If you look at the DES-III contest (n0cgi.distributed.net/statistics/des3/..) you will notice that DeepCrack, a machine built by EFF on a limited budget, was the largest contributor. What resources does a funded effort have to launch a brute force attack?
by Gomez Programs -> distributed.net -> Quick Commands -> Client Configuration Type 2 and press Enter (Buffer and Buffer Update Options) Type 9 and press Enter (Load-work precedence) In the New Setting--> field, Enter OGR=0,RC5-72 This will configure your client to ONLY check for RC5 keys (as opposed to OGR, DES, etc.). Once the RC5 contest is complete, you will need to reset this value in order to contribute to the next contest. by Gomez This is NOT the same as cracking software for illegal use. It is sponsored by the inventors of RC5 for the sole purpose of testing the strength of the algorithm. Here is a snippet from the RSA Laboratories website: The goal of the contests described here is to quantify the security offered by the government-endorsed data encryption standard (DES) and other secret-key ciphers with keys of various sizes. The information obtained from these contests is anticipated to be of value to researchers and developers alike as they estimate the strength of an algorithm or application against exhaustive key-search.
by PinHead If you're in the "Core Throughput" view, go to View -> Console Right click on the Console and go to Benchmark -> RC5-72 All Cores This will start the benchmarking process for all the cores. Look at which of the cores will give you the highest keyrate. Then, right click on the console again, go to "Configure" Here choose "3" for Performance Related Options Choose "1" for Core Selection Set RC5=-1 to the core that performed the best. Make sure you save your settings.
by Nick * $1000 to the winner * $1000 to the winner's team (or to the winner if not on a team) * $6000 to a non-profit organization chosen by all participants * $2000 to distributed.net for building the network and supplying the code When I first started the team, I my intent was (and still is) to donate all the prize money that is won on behalf of the team to Justin for providing us with the community. This guarantees at least 1000$ for BroadBandReports.com. In addition, I hope that if the key is found by a member of our team, that additional 1000$ is also donated to Justin. The contribution of 6000$ would be determined by a poll amongst the team members. As of May, 2007 RSA has chosen to discontinue their support and prices for RC-5. The prizes have also been pulled. If there are any additional announcements regarding this project, I will update as necessary.
by Nick It's recommended that you choose x86/Zipped version for windows rigs, as it's not that hard to setup manually. Unzip it into a directory and run dnetc.exe. The first time you run it, it will automatically use the config switch and you'll be in the config menu. There are a few options you need to setup/change. [Mac OS X? see this]
View the log file you selected to see how it's doing. If you do this soon on a fairly decent rig and let it finish one packet (about 10-15 minutes on a XP1700), view the log file to see when it's finished one packet. Then type in "dnetc -update" (to send up all finished packets and replace them with fresh ones) or "dnetc -flush" (to just send up all finished packets). Try to have one packet sent up before 8pm eastern time so that when the stats update (starts once a day, everyday at midnight UTC which is 8pm eastern) you will show up in the stats. Otherwise you'll have to wait another day. Then after about 9pm eastern go here and type in your email address in the text box under "Participant Stats". Click the search button and it will find you. Go to the bottom of that page and click the "email me my password" button, check the email address you used to get your password (and write it down somewhere!) Then go to the Team's stats page and click the "I want to join this team!" link and enter your email address and password. You'll show up on the team stats after the next daily update. ----- Composed and posted by Liontaur
| ||||||||||||
| Sunday, 12-Feb 02:44:44 | Terms of Use & Privacy | feedback | contact | Hosting by nac.net - DSL,Hosting & Co-lo over 12.5 years online! © 1999-2012 dslreports.com. |