> 1) Razor uses SHA1, not MD5. ah, noted.
> 2) Either way, while you're correct (you _can_ have multiple inputs > with the same resulting hash), it's very unlikely to find two sets of > different data with the same hash output. So in reality, MD5/SHA1/etc > aren't unique, but they're unlikely to be abused since finding the > other data sets is really hard. dunno. when I was exploring razor as a solution, I read a relatively large number of complaints in their mailing list archive about false positives (though "it's slow" seemed to be more of a concern to most people) anyway, off-topic... -Chris _______________________________________________________________ Hundreds of nodes, one monster rendering program. Now that’s a super model! Visit http://clustering.foundries.sf.net/ _______________________________________________ Spamassassin-talk mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/spamassassin-talk