RSS
 

Posts Tagged ‘binary’

Hackvent 2019: Day 7

08 Dec 2019
CTF: Hackvent 2019
Link to challenge: https://academy.hacking-lab.com
Date Completed: 7 December 2019

Challenge

HV19.07 Santa Rider

Resources:

For easy download, get it here: HV19-SantaRider.zip

Solution

We watch the provided video and notice that about half way through the LEDs light up in an interesting order. There are 8 total LEDs and multiple LEDs light up at once so we think that this may be hidden binary messages that decode to ASCII. As the video moves very fast its necessary to inspect each frame individually. We can do this by extracting each frame using a tool like FFmpeg but in this case it was faster to simply use a video editor like MPC-HC which allows you to navigate the video frame by frame.

It is very cool to note that because the video is stationary and position of LEDs do not move, one could use a computer vision library like OpenCV to extract the hidden binary.

We get the following binary:

We convert this binary to ASCII and get our final flag!

Flag:  HV19{1m_als0_w0rk1ng_0n_a_r3m0t3_c0ntr0l}

Bonus

This challenge also contained the solution to HV19.H2 Hidden Two

 
No Comments

Posted in Hackvent 2019

 

HACKvent 2015: Day 2

07 Dec 2015
CTF: Hackvent 2015
Link to challenge: http://hackvent.hacking-lab.com
Date Completed: 07 December 2015

Challenge

Solution

After some Googling I realise this is the Klingon language from Star Trek.
I try some online translators (including Bing!) and it is clear that the message is a series of numbers that containor 1 only.
This is most likely binary that represents ASCII text.

I write a small script to convert each component in the text (based on a Klingon number guide):

This prints out some binary:

Total number of bits is 232 and 232/8 bits = 29 bytes.
This is exactly the number of characters in our nugget!

We convert the binary to ASCII and get the flag:
HV15-AfDd-Mr5J-zf1v-K7aO-FQ4h

 
No Comments

Posted in Hackvent 2015