17 Dec
2003
17 Dec
'03
11:17 p.m.
One of the more interesting papers had a claim (with little detail, unfortunately) that for ten million dollars you could build a machine that would "break" MD5, in the sense of finding another message which would hash to the same as a chosen one, in 24 days.
This in itself wouldn't give an attacker much of anything would it? I mean, once they discovered a message which hashed to a given value, the new message wouldn't be in the proper format, would it? Wouldn't it just be noise, instead of text in english, crypto keys, etc.?