MD5 (Message Digest Algorithm 5) is a
message digest algorithm (and
cryptographic hash function) with a 128-bit hash value. MD5 is one of a series of message digest algorithms designed by professor
Ronald Rivest of
MIT. It is an improvement upon its predecessor, MD4, made in response to some analytic work indicating that MD4 was likely to be insecure. MD4 was subsequently shown to be cryptographically insecure. MD5 has been widely used, and was originally thought to be cryptographically secure. However, work in
Europe in 1994 uncovered weaknesses which make further use of MD5 questionable. Specifically, it has been shown that special pairs of messages can be generated which have the same hash. Unlike MD4, it is still thought to be very difficult to produce a message with a given hash.
MD5 checksums are widely used in the free software world to provide assurance than a downloaded file is unaltered. By comparing a publicized MD5 sum with the checksum of a downloaded file, a user can be sure that the file is the same as that offered by the developers. This protects against trojan horses and computer viruses
See also: SHA-1, RIPEMD-160
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