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ogrgkyle

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About ogrgkyle

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  1. Hey, this XOR program did the trick!! hxxp://www.softpedia.com/get/Programming/Other-Programming-Files/Xor.shtml At last, the solution to opening these .QQQ files: 1. Open a .QQQ file in WinRAR and extract both files. 2. Look in the Manifest.ini for that particular file and see what the XOR_KEY says. 3. Run xor.exe in the command prompt and extract the encrypted file: xor.exe encrypted_file_here output.dbx xor_key_here Thanks for the help!
  2. Thanks for the suggestions. I've discovered that these .QQQ files are MSCF cabinet files. If I open one in WinRAR, I see two files: {3f55eda0-b5b6-4966-be7a-2aa629523779} (or something similar) Manifest.ini Here is an example Manifest.ini file: hxxp://pastebin.com/s5hQcpMp One value is "SHA1" and another is "XOR_KEY." I wonder if I can use these values to decrypt these files. What do you think?
  3. Hey, thanks for the info! I tried installing Windows Live OneCare (now discontinued), but I received an installation error: "Network problems are preventing Windows Live OneCare Installation from continuing at this time." All my troubleshooting has not produced a solution. So, do you know if I can use Microsoft Security Essentials (OneCare's successor) to restore the QQQ files?
  4. I have some old DBX files from 2006. These are Outlook Express email folder files. The issue is that they are stored with a .QQQ file extension. (Example: Inbox.dbx.{51cf2dcf-d42d-43be-bc1b-ba07dab55da7}.QQQ) Please tell me if there is a way to extract the DBX files from the QQQ files. Thanks!
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