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by kardos
3496 days ago
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If you had a copy of the two image files from my second link, this 'dupe detector' would erroneously flag one as a dupe. Also, what of truncating the hashes? I don't get why people try to justify using severely weakened things when using the non-broken (ie, secure) version is a /trivial/ drop in replacement... |
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So while you're correct about the two images on that blog, the only reason why you'd get a clash is because the author of that blog post spent ~15 hours on an AWS GPU instance to generate the correct prefixes which, when appended to those files, results in a clash.
So, I guess if you are in the habit of grabbing random files from your hdd, loading them on to an AWS GPU instance for 15 hours (per file) and generating hash collisions, then yeah, don't use fdupes.