The SHA-1 hash 0630e21fd114806445c4ffbe0f6c4f0355db0661 was successfully reversed into the string a809a4fb3dba03108f96c8bde80be75a a4589d1ead45a87a6bef6b96c41b6ba4db580e14 7bd6c8f78d11eea948ddddbd541acc887e9a7064 e5b7f06cfeb2303d200ed7d60723a57fd92e4da0 4bf541f9d353914327dd963461e8677c 75bd6da1c9342992b4903f8c2184c324d814c9d7 5baa61e4c9b93f3f0682250b6
Feel free to provide some other SHA-1 hashes you would like to try to reverse.
Reverse a SHA-1 hash
You can generate the SHA-1 hash of the string which was just reversed to have the proof that it is the same as the SHA-1 hash you provided:
Convert a string to a SHA-1 hash
What is a SHA-1 hash?
SHA-1 (Secure Hash Algorithm, 1st version) is an algorithm which converts a given sequence of characters into another unique sequence of characters, with a fixed length, called "hash". For instance, the SHA-1 hash of the word password is 5baa61e4c9b93f3f0682250b6cf8331b7ee68fd8.
These hashes are mostly used to validate file integrity, to encrypt sensitive data (like passwords), and to generate unique identifiers.
Is it secure?
SHA-1 hashes are theoretically impossible to reverse directly, ie, it is not possible to retrieve the original string from a given hash using only mathematical operations.
Most web sites and applications store their user passwords into databases with SHA-1 encryption. This method appears to be safe as it seems impossible to retrieve original user passwords if, say, a hacker manages to have a look at the database content.
Unfortunately, there is a way to decrypt a SHA-1 hash, using a dictionary populated with strings and their SHA-1 counterpart. As most users use very simple passwords (like "123456", "password", "abc123", etc), SHA-1 dictionaries make them very easy to retrieve.
This website uses a SHA-1 reverse dictionary containing several millions of entries, which you can use with SHA-1 hashes from your application.
If some of the hashes you enter can be reversed, consider using another way of generating hashes, like using stronger algorithms (SHA-2, Whirlpool, etc), combining algorithms, and using a "salt".
Links
- MD5 Center
- Convert and reverse MD5 hashes.
- Cryptography Center
- Encrypt, decrypt, convert, encode and decode text.
- Definition of SHA-1 on Wikipedia.org
- Learn more about SHA-1 hashes by reading the related article on Wikipedia.org