Dlc Decrypter 0.8.0.2

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Ever needed to download the latest and greatest files off a website but found yourself forced to use some proprietary download manager application (jdownloader, cryptload, whatever.) because the download links were hidden in.DLC/.CCF/.RSDF container files? Get your links back out off these braindead containers by using our ContainerEx Decrypter! ContainerEx Decrypter is reliable and easy to use software that helps you to download the latest and greatest files off a website. Requirements: - OS: Windows XP SP2+, - NET Framework 3.5, IE 7.0+, - JavaScript enabled.

  1. Dlc Decrypter Software

(If you’re in a hurry, see at the very end for a quick list of all useful software and video tutorials) JDownloader is an open source download manager, primarily aimed at downloading from captcha-protected download sites (RapidShare, Megaupload, Hotfile, Netload) but supporting also any “normal” download (like a picture from photobucket, or actually any file from any server). Although claiming to be open source (and actually, it’s currently under the GNU GPL), parts of it are close source. Notably because they rely on an undisclosed encryption algorithm for their encrypted links list files. I’ve never understood the point of making those lists undecipherable, particularly since anyone is able to open such a list with JDowloader and to grab the files.

Only they won’t be able to easily get the location of those files. Anyway, there are several easy ways to find the links inside a DLC:. The always-working method: JDownloader will never be able to prevent you from using this method, as this would require the complicity of hosters. Basically, this method involves to simply spy your own connection and record what URLs are retrieved by JDownloader. When you load a DLC links list, JDownloader will check if the files are online.

  1. Posativ / opendlc. Pull requests 0. Projects 0 Insights Permalink. Branch: master. Descr = (' dlc.py is a small script to decrypt DLC files. It requires a '.
  2. Descargar container decrypter 0.8.1.2. Extrae los enlaces de ficheros DLC, CCF y RSDF. Container Decrypter es una herramienta que permite extraer todos los enlaces de.

With any packet sniffer you can list those links. A more detailed short video tutorial was posted on.

Fast and easy DLC CCF RSDF container and C'n'L decryption.

Just in case this goes offline (as other DLC decrypters have), I mirrored their video on Megaupload there (tip: if you want to save download wait time, don’t download it yet but rather watch it live on megavideo and their toolkit too. The easier method, but probably not working with recent DLC files (JDownloader tend to change their encryption method regularly to avoid decrypters): a decrypter made by Seba. It was originally posted but eventually disappeared. But thanks to I still managed to find it and I uploaded it here It was created around May 2009, so it should work with DLC files created before this date, and possibly during some time after. I didn’t test it with current DLC files. For a short summary:.

DLC Decrypter version 0.7 (May 2009) by Seba (broken link, used to point to. Video tutorial that (normally should) always works, and the tools that go with it Update (2011-03-27): online DLC decrypter As you can see from the comments, every now and then some DLC decryption sites pop up then go. Well, I think I’ve found a pretty “stable” one, or at least one which has been maintained for around 9 months now. I just tested it, and it works for the moment. It’s a bit slow, so I wouldn’t be too surprised if their inner workings were just like the “always working” method I described above: run jDownloader and analyze its network traffic!

Dlc Decrypter Software

(which would mean a very high probability of remaining online as long as the owner wishes to) Or of course maybe it just means they’re on a slow server, eh 😀 The site is Update (2011-04-17): offline DLC/CCF/RSDF decrypter As you can see from the comments, the decrypter “by Seba” is actually developed by a company which still updates it. The current version seems to be 1.7.0.0 (the one in Seba’s pack is only 0.7) so it’s probably worth the upgrade if you manage to run the installer (it failed to install on my Windows 7 x64, which is why I’m not exactly sure of the current version number). Their website: Update (2011-10-27): another online decrypter offers pretty much the same functions as dcrypt.it, so those 2 are pretty much interchangeable should one of them be temporarily unavailable. Update (2012-01-31): files stolen by the FBI As you most likely know, Megaupload was without any prior notice.

Some files I linked to were hosted there without any backup so, broken links now I guess 🙁 On the plus side, the online tools as well as the self-hosted containerex.info work just as well (better indeed) as the things I hosted on Megaupload. As a memorial (and maybe in case there’s a way to get those files back), I’m leaving the original MU URLs in plain-text next to the former links. Silverlight needs to just die and give up YUCK! Microsucks can take a hike really they haven’t produced anything decent since windoze 98. Surprised anyone techie enough to put together a DLC decryption website would use crappy M$ stuff! Or even Leopard for that matter! I mean my god, how many licks does it take to get Internet Explorer right?

Apparently none, cuz it’ll never be right! Thanks anyway, always appreciate people putting up their work like that, just too bad most people won’t use it due to silverlight. Actually, unfortunately I’m not sure many ppl really mind installing Silverlight 🙁 It’s like Vista and Seven, it’s all flash no substance but basic consumers love the shiny look, even when performances are poor. I recently checked a friend’s laptop, Seven took ages to load because she had 1.4 GiB of RAM getting filled at start up with various junk (MSN, SKype, etc) – it was so much junk that it created a conflict with sound playback (it turned out the culprit was Skype). But I’m getting off topic, eh 😀.

Decrypter

Wow, are you guys really that arrogant? OMFGLINUXISGAWDLOLOLOL Get a life. Not everything revolves around some idiots getting together and trying to use for-server OS as actual user OS. I have no problem with 7. In fact, it’s faster, not to mention better, than XP ever was, which was faster than ‘windoze 98’ could ever hope to be. Of course, if you’re running a crap laptop with a billion programs loading on startup.

Software

Um, what do you actually expect to happen? You can’t possibly think of blaming an OS for doing what it’s told. That’s just ignorant. @Whatever: 1.

Nobody before you talked about Linux in this thread. You make me realize that I forgot to mention one thing in my last comment about this friend who had a very slow start-up: she we was still happy with it, “because it looks good” (hence my “basic consumers love the shiny look, even when performances are poor”). Are you also going to pretend that XP is faster than 3.1? Se7en is only interesting because Microsoft didn’t want to add some features to XP. Mainly: a well-promoted 64 bits version, Dx11, support for more hardware by default. Also about the speed, you waste tons of time with this UAC crap (or end up deactivating it): Se7en is like “XP with extra Linux annoyances” (and with 4 times the RAM usage on a clean install).

If you’re talking about the executable, it’s a false positive. If you’re talking about the rest, well, I didn’t check where the links point to but they’re useless anyway. However, strangely enough I missed a very important thing about this package: the software it contains is developed by a company which still exists! So it still receives updates: (the version in the package is 0.7 while the current version is at least 1.7.0.0!). So, long story short: you should grab the latest version from that site rather than the outdated version here.