Using public rainbow tables or reverse hash lookups (e.g., CrackStation, MD5Online), this hash does not immediately resolve to a common plaintext password. However, in the context of mcpx10bin, it is not a password hash but rather a file hash. That means:

Use this file if:

Avoid this file if:


| Attribute | Value | |--------------------|------------------------------------------------------------| | MD5 | d49c52a4102f6df7bcf8d0617ac475ed | | Filename | mcpx10bin | | Malicious | [Confirmed / Suspicious / Benign / Unknown] | | Confidence | [High / Medium / Low] | | Notes | No immediate threat intel matches; further static analysis recommended |

Run this command to confirm the file matches known good dumps:

md5sum mcpx10.bin
# Should output: d49c52a4102f6df7bcf8d0617ac475ed

Or on Windows:

certutil -hashfile mcpx10.bin MD5

The provided string seems to indicate an MD5 hash and related information, but without more context, it's hard to give a specific analysis. MD5, while historically significant and still in use, has largely been replaced by more secure hash functions like SHA-256 for applications requiring high security.

The name mcpx10bin suggests:

It might be a binary file from an embedded system, a game mod, a router firmware component, or a malware sample.

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