That’s a meme page. Do NOT submit your real private keys!
- That’s a meme page. Do NOT submit your real private keys! - Don’t tell me what to do with my employers keys. - if you have your employer’s keys… 
- That’s ok. Just don’t do it with your personal ones. 
 
- I went to a similar site, but instead of checking private keys it checked all my credit cards to make sure they weren’t on the dark web. - /s - Do you have a link? I want to check mine 
- Also, check if your PIN has been leaked as well! https://pastebin.com/Nn2ZcdfC - Ah but you can use Cantor’s diagonal proof to get a new one. For example if I take the first four and increase the nth digit on the nth row then I get 1114 which isn’t in the set. 
- I could have sworn I had a bank card for a while with a 6-digit pin… Am I crazy? Is that impossible? Or is the joke worn out? 
 
 
- Page claims to be IPv6 ready…does not actually have an IPv6 address. This isn’t a meme, this is a crime 
- It says it - IPv6 readybut doesn’t even have any AAAA DNS records.- It does use TLS 1.3, but only AES 128 bits for me. - Always great to see people who check security before putting their personal information in somewhere 
- well, its ready, not that its implemented 😏 
- Glad to see I’m not the only one checking for a AAAA. Looked like a cool and useful site /s but I only use sites with v6. 
 
- To save anyone the trouble, here’s a key I’ve generated just now: - -----BEGIN OPENSSH PRIVATE KEY----- b3BlbnNzaC1rZXktdjEAAAAABG5vbmUAAAAEbm9uZQAAAAAAAAABAAAAMwAAAAtzc2gtZW QyNTUxOQAAACAqTGrNcWWZrKjDzAgG1KaCYAOOAoqSSQvvWVgUx7PdMgAAAJgzuRsTM7kb EwAAAAtzc2gtZWQyNTUxOQAAACAqTGrNcWWZrKjDzAgG1KaCYAOOAoqSSQvvWVgUx7PdMg AAAEC8jODzrMngnvJlMwtlhqwlI6qS42WlzSDADbEYaCsRzCpMas1xZZmsqMPMCAbUpoJg A44CipJJC+9ZWBTHs90yAAAAEXUwX2E0MzhAbG9jYWxob3N0AQIDBA== -----END OPENSSH PRIVATE KEY------ (and if I did it wrong enough, well, you can hack me but please let me know how I fucked up) - Change any random character in there to see how the website reacts to a unique key. I changed an O to an o and it accepted it. - Wait, that’s my key. Ohhh QIDBA not QADBX. 
- FWIW this is what I did: - $ ssh-keygen -f fake_ssh_key- (press Enter twice for no passphrase) - and then: - $ cat fake_ssh_key- Which I then just copy-pasted from the terminal. Surely this can’t reveal anything about my other private keys, right? - Yes. It only reveals stuff about your defaults, which should be ed25519 globally now anyway. 
- We know your unique machine ID now. - I’ll be impressed if you tell me what operating system I’m using. 
 
 
 
- How do I upload from my company’s yubikey? 
- Hunter2 - All I see is ******* 
 
- Didn’t pass captcha to submit my crypto wallet :( - Have you tried disabling VPN? - I’m a robot 
 
 
- I just gave away my private key used to access my vps via ssh. - The website is secured with SSL ✓ and network traffic encrypted with TLSv1.3 ✓. Furthermore, the website uses IPv6 ✓ and my private key is encrypted with AES256 ✓✓✓. Nobody else can access it. - And? What was the result? Is your key safe to use? 
 
- The disclaimer ruins the joke - Better safe than sorry - No 
 
- I’m pretty sure there was a version without it first. - Still made me laugh 🤷 - Yes I do remember it used to not be there 
 
 
- Blocked by defender - Damn. Microsoft did something right? 
 
- Awesome :3 
- the answer is yes 














