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mjolk | 9 years ago
That's not even the same realm as this case:
> The Forensic examination also disclosed that Doe had downloaded thousands of files known by their “hash” values to be child pornography[0]
Thousands of hash collisions would require prior knowledge of the values and a concerted effort to deceive. It would be more realistic to say that human perception is broken when looking at the media than it is to argue with the mathematical reality at play here.
> The requirement should be for them to look at the actual content, not the hash.
Refusing the evidence known to exist and definitely covered by probable cause is why the defendant is still in custody.
[0] https://arstechnica.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/03/rawlsopin...
braveo|9 years ago
So using the law to defend yourself doesn't really apply here.
> Thousands of hash collisions would require prior knowledge of the values and a concerted effort to deceive. It would be more realistic to say that human perception is broken when looking at the media than it is to argue with the mathematical reality at play here.
This confidence is why my anecdote applies. That confidence is flat out scary when you hear people in law use terms like "impossible" or "virtually impossible" when speaking about things that are not.