1997-01-24 - Re: Encrypting ZIP disks

Header Data

From: Toto <toto@sk.sympatico.ca>
To: “David E. Smith” <dsmith@prairienet.org>
Message Hash: 5c30046d63ed0da68b6cd8caeade7a7056eca9e69129673055818c4e6e620d67
Message ID: <32E933F4.45CE@sk.sympatico.ca>
Reply To: <3.0.32.19970124132442.006b1fc4@midwest.net>
UTC Datetime: 1997-01-24 20:26:14 UTC
Raw Date: Fri, 24 Jan 1997 12:26:14 -0800 (PST)

Raw message

From: Toto <toto@sk.sympatico.ca>
Date: Fri, 24 Jan 1997 12:26:14 -0800 (PST)
To: "David E. Smith" <dsmith@prairienet.org>
Subject: Re: Encrypting ZIP disks
In-Reply-To: <3.0.32.19970124132442.006b1fc4@midwest.net>
Message-ID: <32E933F4.45CE@sk.sympatico.ca>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain


David E. Smith wrote:
> I'm playing with SecureDrive; the problem is not with using it
> with a Zip disk so much as it is trying to get it to play nice
> with Windows 95.
 
> Iomega hasn't been willing to tell me how the password is stored,
> so this looks like a big boiling pot of snake oil.  Anyone out
> there played with Zip drive/disk internals and know how it works?
> 
Dave,
  I came across a 'cracker' program that claims to be able to
hack the SecureDrive encryption system.
  Off the top of my head, I think it was called ZipCracker, or 
something similar in name to one of the PKZip encryption
cracking programs.  I found it on one of the hacker websites,
and there was a text file regarding SecureDrive which went
into some detail re: both the hardware and software aspects
of the Zip drives and the encryption itself.

Toto






Thread