Do I need MD5 as a companion to SHA-1?












0















Do I need both MD5 and SHA-1 values to be sure the downloaded file is



a) Untouched by hackers. For example, when I need to download some app's .iso via torrents



and



b) Not corrupted during technical issues? For example, some unstable network connection during download.



Or, probably, SHA-1 value will be enough for both checks?



Also, is SHA-1 (without MD5) enough to be sure that some file downloaded years ago and stored somewhere on my HDD haven't degradated?










share|improve this question

























  • This is not a programming question. But the attack on SHA-1 in early 2017 required "the equivalent processing power as 6,500 years of single-CPU computations and 110 years of single-GPU computations", so SHA-1 should be safe enough.

    – Stijn
    Nov 23 '18 at 20:17
















0















Do I need both MD5 and SHA-1 values to be sure the downloaded file is



a) Untouched by hackers. For example, when I need to download some app's .iso via torrents



and



b) Not corrupted during technical issues? For example, some unstable network connection during download.



Or, probably, SHA-1 value will be enough for both checks?



Also, is SHA-1 (without MD5) enough to be sure that some file downloaded years ago and stored somewhere on my HDD haven't degradated?










share|improve this question

























  • This is not a programming question. But the attack on SHA-1 in early 2017 required "the equivalent processing power as 6,500 years of single-CPU computations and 110 years of single-GPU computations", so SHA-1 should be safe enough.

    – Stijn
    Nov 23 '18 at 20:17














0












0








0








Do I need both MD5 and SHA-1 values to be sure the downloaded file is



a) Untouched by hackers. For example, when I need to download some app's .iso via torrents



and



b) Not corrupted during technical issues? For example, some unstable network connection during download.



Or, probably, SHA-1 value will be enough for both checks?



Also, is SHA-1 (without MD5) enough to be sure that some file downloaded years ago and stored somewhere on my HDD haven't degradated?










share|improve this question
















Do I need both MD5 and SHA-1 values to be sure the downloaded file is



a) Untouched by hackers. For example, when I need to download some app's .iso via torrents



and



b) Not corrupted during technical issues? For example, some unstable network connection during download.



Or, probably, SHA-1 value will be enough for both checks?



Also, is SHA-1 (without MD5) enough to be sure that some file downloaded years ago and stored somewhere on my HDD haven't degradated?







security hash md5 sha1 sha






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Nov 23 '18 at 20:13







john c. j.

















asked Nov 23 '18 at 20:06









john c. j.john c. j.

6861133




6861133













  • This is not a programming question. But the attack on SHA-1 in early 2017 required "the equivalent processing power as 6,500 years of single-CPU computations and 110 years of single-GPU computations", so SHA-1 should be safe enough.

    – Stijn
    Nov 23 '18 at 20:17



















  • This is not a programming question. But the attack on SHA-1 in early 2017 required "the equivalent processing power as 6,500 years of single-CPU computations and 110 years of single-GPU computations", so SHA-1 should be safe enough.

    – Stijn
    Nov 23 '18 at 20:17

















This is not a programming question. But the attack on SHA-1 in early 2017 required "the equivalent processing power as 6,500 years of single-CPU computations and 110 years of single-GPU computations", so SHA-1 should be safe enough.

– Stijn
Nov 23 '18 at 20:17





This is not a programming question. But the attack on SHA-1 in early 2017 required "the equivalent processing power as 6,500 years of single-CPU computations and 110 years of single-GPU computations", so SHA-1 should be safe enough.

– Stijn
Nov 23 '18 at 20:17












1 Answer
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From a security perspective MD-5 is utterly broken.



SHA-1 is considered suspicious, and avoided for most uses if at all possible. For new projects: don't use it at all.



SHA-2 (aka SHA-256, SHA-512, etc.) is still widely used for fast hashes.



SHA-3 is the future since 2012, nothing is stopping you from using it already. I see little reason not to use it for new projects.



What's the problem with older ones:




  • Their resistance to finding collisions is below par: This is an attacker creating 2 contents that have the same hash. These are constructed at the same time. This problem is there for MD5 and SHA-1, and it's BAD, but requires the attacker creating both versions (and then they can do a switch at any time they want undetected).

  • Their resistance to length extension attacks is relatively weak. This is especially true for MD5, but SHA-1 and even SHA-2 to some degree suffer from it.


When is it not a problem: to ensure your disk has not produced an error: and hash will do, even a simple CRC32 will work wonders (and I'd recommend the simpler CRC check), or a RAID array, as these can fix errors, not just detect them.



Use both ?
Well if you have to find a collision on one hash and have that same set of plaintexts also produce a collision on another hash, is probably more difficult. This approach has been used in the past, The original PGP did something like it. If I'm not mistaken it had a number of things it calculated, one of them simply the length (which would prevent the extension attack above).



So yes, it likely adds something, but the way md5 and SHA-1 and SHA-2 work internally is quite similar, and that's the worrisome part: they are too much alike to be sure just how much it adds against a highly sophisticated attacker (think the level of the NSA and their counterparts).



So why not use one of the more modern versions of SHA-2, or even better SHA-3 ? They've no known weaknesses and have been peer-reviewed heavily. As such for any commercial level use, they should be more than enough.



Refs:




  • https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Length_extension_attack

  • https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Collision_attack

  • https://stackoverflow.com/questions/tagged/sha-3






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    1 Answer
    1






    active

    oldest

    votes








    1 Answer
    1






    active

    oldest

    votes









    active

    oldest

    votes






    active

    oldest

    votes









    1














    From a security perspective MD-5 is utterly broken.



    SHA-1 is considered suspicious, and avoided for most uses if at all possible. For new projects: don't use it at all.



    SHA-2 (aka SHA-256, SHA-512, etc.) is still widely used for fast hashes.



    SHA-3 is the future since 2012, nothing is stopping you from using it already. I see little reason not to use it for new projects.



    What's the problem with older ones:




    • Their resistance to finding collisions is below par: This is an attacker creating 2 contents that have the same hash. These are constructed at the same time. This problem is there for MD5 and SHA-1, and it's BAD, but requires the attacker creating both versions (and then they can do a switch at any time they want undetected).

    • Their resistance to length extension attacks is relatively weak. This is especially true for MD5, but SHA-1 and even SHA-2 to some degree suffer from it.


    When is it not a problem: to ensure your disk has not produced an error: and hash will do, even a simple CRC32 will work wonders (and I'd recommend the simpler CRC check), or a RAID array, as these can fix errors, not just detect them.



    Use both ?
    Well if you have to find a collision on one hash and have that same set of plaintexts also produce a collision on another hash, is probably more difficult. This approach has been used in the past, The original PGP did something like it. If I'm not mistaken it had a number of things it calculated, one of them simply the length (which would prevent the extension attack above).



    So yes, it likely adds something, but the way md5 and SHA-1 and SHA-2 work internally is quite similar, and that's the worrisome part: they are too much alike to be sure just how much it adds against a highly sophisticated attacker (think the level of the NSA and their counterparts).



    So why not use one of the more modern versions of SHA-2, or even better SHA-3 ? They've no known weaknesses and have been peer-reviewed heavily. As such for any commercial level use, they should be more than enough.



    Refs:




    • https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Length_extension_attack

    • https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Collision_attack

    • https://stackoverflow.com/questions/tagged/sha-3






    share|improve this answer




























      1














      From a security perspective MD-5 is utterly broken.



      SHA-1 is considered suspicious, and avoided for most uses if at all possible. For new projects: don't use it at all.



      SHA-2 (aka SHA-256, SHA-512, etc.) is still widely used for fast hashes.



      SHA-3 is the future since 2012, nothing is stopping you from using it already. I see little reason not to use it for new projects.



      What's the problem with older ones:




      • Their resistance to finding collisions is below par: This is an attacker creating 2 contents that have the same hash. These are constructed at the same time. This problem is there for MD5 and SHA-1, and it's BAD, but requires the attacker creating both versions (and then they can do a switch at any time they want undetected).

      • Their resistance to length extension attacks is relatively weak. This is especially true for MD5, but SHA-1 and even SHA-2 to some degree suffer from it.


      When is it not a problem: to ensure your disk has not produced an error: and hash will do, even a simple CRC32 will work wonders (and I'd recommend the simpler CRC check), or a RAID array, as these can fix errors, not just detect them.



      Use both ?
      Well if you have to find a collision on one hash and have that same set of plaintexts also produce a collision on another hash, is probably more difficult. This approach has been used in the past, The original PGP did something like it. If I'm not mistaken it had a number of things it calculated, one of them simply the length (which would prevent the extension attack above).



      So yes, it likely adds something, but the way md5 and SHA-1 and SHA-2 work internally is quite similar, and that's the worrisome part: they are too much alike to be sure just how much it adds against a highly sophisticated attacker (think the level of the NSA and their counterparts).



      So why not use one of the more modern versions of SHA-2, or even better SHA-3 ? They've no known weaknesses and have been peer-reviewed heavily. As such for any commercial level use, they should be more than enough.



      Refs:




      • https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Length_extension_attack

      • https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Collision_attack

      • https://stackoverflow.com/questions/tagged/sha-3






      share|improve this answer


























        1












        1








        1







        From a security perspective MD-5 is utterly broken.



        SHA-1 is considered suspicious, and avoided for most uses if at all possible. For new projects: don't use it at all.



        SHA-2 (aka SHA-256, SHA-512, etc.) is still widely used for fast hashes.



        SHA-3 is the future since 2012, nothing is stopping you from using it already. I see little reason not to use it for new projects.



        What's the problem with older ones:




        • Their resistance to finding collisions is below par: This is an attacker creating 2 contents that have the same hash. These are constructed at the same time. This problem is there for MD5 and SHA-1, and it's BAD, but requires the attacker creating both versions (and then they can do a switch at any time they want undetected).

        • Their resistance to length extension attacks is relatively weak. This is especially true for MD5, but SHA-1 and even SHA-2 to some degree suffer from it.


        When is it not a problem: to ensure your disk has not produced an error: and hash will do, even a simple CRC32 will work wonders (and I'd recommend the simpler CRC check), or a RAID array, as these can fix errors, not just detect them.



        Use both ?
        Well if you have to find a collision on one hash and have that same set of plaintexts also produce a collision on another hash, is probably more difficult. This approach has been used in the past, The original PGP did something like it. If I'm not mistaken it had a number of things it calculated, one of them simply the length (which would prevent the extension attack above).



        So yes, it likely adds something, but the way md5 and SHA-1 and SHA-2 work internally is quite similar, and that's the worrisome part: they are too much alike to be sure just how much it adds against a highly sophisticated attacker (think the level of the NSA and their counterparts).



        So why not use one of the more modern versions of SHA-2, or even better SHA-3 ? They've no known weaknesses and have been peer-reviewed heavily. As such for any commercial level use, they should be more than enough.



        Refs:




        • https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Length_extension_attack

        • https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Collision_attack

        • https://stackoverflow.com/questions/tagged/sha-3






        share|improve this answer













        From a security perspective MD-5 is utterly broken.



        SHA-1 is considered suspicious, and avoided for most uses if at all possible. For new projects: don't use it at all.



        SHA-2 (aka SHA-256, SHA-512, etc.) is still widely used for fast hashes.



        SHA-3 is the future since 2012, nothing is stopping you from using it already. I see little reason not to use it for new projects.



        What's the problem with older ones:




        • Their resistance to finding collisions is below par: This is an attacker creating 2 contents that have the same hash. These are constructed at the same time. This problem is there for MD5 and SHA-1, and it's BAD, but requires the attacker creating both versions (and then they can do a switch at any time they want undetected).

        • Their resistance to length extension attacks is relatively weak. This is especially true for MD5, but SHA-1 and even SHA-2 to some degree suffer from it.


        When is it not a problem: to ensure your disk has not produced an error: and hash will do, even a simple CRC32 will work wonders (and I'd recommend the simpler CRC check), or a RAID array, as these can fix errors, not just detect them.



        Use both ?
        Well if you have to find a collision on one hash and have that same set of plaintexts also produce a collision on another hash, is probably more difficult. This approach has been used in the past, The original PGP did something like it. If I'm not mistaken it had a number of things it calculated, one of them simply the length (which would prevent the extension attack above).



        So yes, it likely adds something, but the way md5 and SHA-1 and SHA-2 work internally is quite similar, and that's the worrisome part: they are too much alike to be sure just how much it adds against a highly sophisticated attacker (think the level of the NSA and their counterparts).



        So why not use one of the more modern versions of SHA-2, or even better SHA-3 ? They've no known weaknesses and have been peer-reviewed heavily. As such for any commercial level use, they should be more than enough.



        Refs:




        • https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Length_extension_attack

        • https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Collision_attack

        • https://stackoverflow.com/questions/tagged/sha-3







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        answered Nov 23 '18 at 20:42







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