Elcomsoft, a specialist in password recovery, has added PGP support to Elcomsoft Distributed Password Recovery. The program offers administrators a comprehensive solution for recovering passwords to MS-Office documents when employees forget their passwords, or when they deliberately add passwords to documents in an effort to sabotage their companies. The latest version can handle PGP encryption, including PGP secret key rings (.SKR files), PGP disks (.PGD files), and PGP self-decrypting archives.
Before Distributed Password Recovery, the most effective way to recover a lost password was to put the locked file on the fastest machine in the company, and use brute force to attack the password. Distributed Password Recovery lets you coordinate all of the unused computing power of every computer on your LAN or WAN, and use distributed processing to restore the lost password.
Pretty Good Privacy (PGP) is the strongest industry-standard encryption, and is widely used in all consumer and corporate markets. It is based on assymetric keys (public and private). If the private key is not available, then using brute force methods to break the encryption would take centuries, even on today\'s fastest computer. Elcomsoft has discovered a way to use the power of its Distributed Password Recovery software to recover 5-character - and even longer - PGP passwords.
Distributed Password Recovery installs \"Agents\" onto as many computers on the network as the user desires. Each of these Agents uses brute force to try to recover the lost password. The program ensures that these Agents work together, and combine their computing power to find the lost password. The more computing power available, the faster the recovery speed.
Another module of the program, the Console, is designed to manage the agents. This solution is best for big enterprisers with thousands of clients when employees leave without un-protecting their mission-critical documents.
According to Elcomsoft, the program restores passwords for Word and Excel documents encrypted with 40 bit keys (Office 97/2000 compatible) as well as more recent documents (Office XP/2003) encrypted with CSP. Office 97/2000 documents can be also decrypted by recovery of encryption keys instead of password, and that type of attack gives a guaranteed result regardless of password length and complexity.
Distributed Password Recovery can be easily installed in enterprises networks with thousands of computers and needs little traffic. The agents work in the background without harming other programs. That is, they use the CPU only when it is in its idle state. An administrator can get a report about the work that is done. When a password is restored or a document is decrypted, the program informs the administrator by e-mail, and starts processing the next task. Using the Console, an administrator can also keep statistics.
The software has a plug-in architecture and can be easily extended to support more document formats and types of encryption. Future releases will support Adobe Acrobat PDF files, ZIP and RAR archives, and more.
Elcomsoft Distributed Password Recovery v. 1.1 runs under Windows NT4/2000/XP/2003 and requires 4 MB of hard disk space on the server and 2 MB on every client. Prices begin at $599(US) for networks with up to 20 clients/agents. For more information and a free trial version of Elcomsoft Distributed Password Recovery, please visit http://edpr.elcomsoft.com
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About ElcomSoft Co. Ltd.
Since 1990, ElcomSoft Co. Ltd. has been developing and marketing password recovery, forensics, and security software for Windows. In addition to Distributed Password Recovery, the company also offers a comprehensive line of password recovery and password auditing software for popular Microsoft, Lotus, Corel and Adobe software, as well as dozens of popular email clients, compression programs, instant messenger applications, and other applications.
ElcomSoft is a Microsoft Gold Certified Partner. ElcomSoft\'s tools are used by most of the Fortune 500 corporations, many branches of the military worldwide, international governments, all major accounting companies, and firms and institutions of all sizes.