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Home/ Questions/Q 303765
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 12, 20262026-05-12T07:13:06+00:00 2026-05-12T07:13:06+00:00

Already understanding that AES is the encryption method of choice, should existing code that

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Already understanding that AES is the encryption method of choice, should existing code that uses DES be re-written if the likely threat is on the level of script kiddies? (e.g. pkzip passwords can be cracked with free utilities by non-computer professionals, so is DES like that?) A quick google search seems to imply that even deprecated DES still requires a super computer and large quantity of time–or have times changed?

In particular, this CAPTCHA library uses DES to encrypt the challenge string which is sent to the user in viewstate.

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-12T07:13:07+00:00Added an answer on May 12, 2026 at 7:13 am

    DES is broken so far as storing sensitive data, and so I would certainly not use it in anything new, and would replace it in anything used for long term storage of any information of interest (data that someone would have a profit for national security interest in stealing).

    At the moment a DES message can be broken by brute force in a couple of days (or less) using under $100,000 worth of custom hardware.

    But there are some key factors in that:

    The hardware is custom – the chips used to quickly brute a DES key are not the general purpose processor you’d find in a PC. That being said there is probably room today for using a cluster of Playstation 3s or current generation graphics cards with a GPGPU to crack a DES message in a reasonable amount of time, perhaps bringing down the cost to maybe $15,000.

    The other factor is time – a DES message can be cracked in a day, but if your CAPTCHA library has a timestamp that specifies a 30 minute timeout for any given CAPTCHA response, it would still be effective (you could scale up your hardware, but then you’re talking millions).

    Overall I’d say that for non-long term storage, DES is still secure against “script kiddies”.

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