HashKiller Forum is an online community centered on password recovery, hash cracking, and digital forensics. Founded to bring together security enthusiasts, researchers, and professionals, the forum serves as a place to discuss hash algorithms, cracking techniques, tools, and real-world incident response. Its user base ranges from hobbyist cryptanalysts experimenting with hashcat and John the Ripper to cybersecurity practitioners sharing guidance on forensic workflows and password policy improvements.
Hashkiller was a prominent, long-standing forum and database that served as a central hub for the cryptography community, focusing on sharing techniques and collaborating on cracking encrypted hashes. The platform, which hosted massive password wordlists and facilitated the exchange of technical knowledge, has largely been succeeded by modern alternatives like HashMob and Hashes.com. For a list of current password cracking tools and resources, visit awesome-password-cracking. n0kovo/awesome-password-cracking - GitHub hashkiller forum
rling (rli replacement) testing required | Page 3 - Hashkiller HashKiller Forum HashKiller Forum is an online community
At its core, HashKiller was a community-driven platform focused on hashing algorithms. In computing, a hash is a "one-way" cryptographic function that turns data (like a password) into a fixed-string of characters. Since you can’t simply "reverse" a hash to see the original password, "cracking" involves comparing millions of potential guesses against the hash until a match is found. rling (rli replacement) testing required | Page 3
I’ve come across a hash from a legacy system I’m auditing, and I’m having trouble identifying the exact mode. I’ve tried a few common ones with Hashcat, but no luck so far.