On Wed, 10 Aug 2005 22:07:19 CDT, "J.A. Terranson" said: > Mr Mirabilis yesterday said he had received more than 100 inquiries > from motorists anxious to use the same defence. "People have shown it > [the algorithm] has been hacked and it's open to viruses."
MD5 has viruses? (For what it's worth, the MD5 break concerned forming 2 different plaintexts that had the same MD5 hash, but you have no control over what the hash value actually is - forming a second plaintext to match a given plaintext's hash is still believed infeasible). Your best attack would probably be to attack the "chain of evidence" of the MD5 hash itself, and show that a different picture, with different MD5, could have replaced the original.. This proves 2 things: 1) The qualifications for "expert witness" are *way* too low. 2) We *really* need to be vigilant in our defense of correct usage of terms.
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