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Date:      Sun, 2 Mar 2014 08:52:56 -1000
From:      Kent Kuriyama <kent.kuriyama@gmail.com>
To:        FreeBSD Questions <freebsd-questions@freebsd.org>
Subject:   Re: Cryptografically signed ISO images
Message-ID:  <CACArijBNZL=OPwa1_0CTkF6uaEt8N=oU_X4B8RdDw87UcBhcVA@mail.gmail.com>
In-Reply-To: <20140302183855.GA5308@hp-netbook.local>
References:  <20140302172759.GA4728@hp-netbook.local> <CAFG2KC%2BU7Q4U5nLgxJptZgj5VmdSNpUmEm7Q3nQjZNiMejDozg@mail.gmail.com> <20140302174314.GA4932@hp-netbook.local> <CAFG2KCJpAkXVWsNFYs=oL-9oNz68Da0X=3jg31QrFhMAUkBL5w@mail.gmail.com> <20140302183855.GA5308@hp-netbook.local>

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Elias, If the use of SHA-2 hashes don't provide enough assurance that the
ISO images are authentic can you explain the crypto technology that you are
looking for?  Digitally signatures would enable one to verify that the
published hashes are indeed from a trusted source - Is that what you are
seeking?


On Sun, Mar 2, 2014 at 8:38 AM, Elias Diem <lists@webconect.ch> wrote:

> On 2014-03-02,  Anton Sayetsky wrote:
>
> > Partly.
> >
> > http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SHA-2
> > > SHA-2 is a set of cryptographic hash functions (SHA-224, SHA-256,
> SHA-384, SHA-512, SHA-512/224, SHA-512/256) designed by the U.S. National
> Security Agency (NSA) and published in 2001 by the NIST as a U.S. Federal
> Information Processing Standard (FIPS).
>
> Ah well, I was looking for a signature (like PGP or
> something).
>
> I therefore assume that there are no crypto signatures,
> "only" checksums.
>
> > I forgot to say that checksums are also present in all release
> announcements.
>
> That might help a bit.
>
> --
> Greetings
> Elias
>
>
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