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by gorjusborg
589 days ago
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> Out of curiosity, what is false positive rate of a hash match? No way to know without knowledge of the 'proprietary hashing technology'.
Theoretically though, a hash can have infinitely many inputs that produce the same output. Mismatching hash values from the same hashing algorithm can prove mismatching inputs, but matching hash values don't ensure matching inputs. > I wonder if (or why) human verification is actually necessary here It's not about frequency, it's about criticality of getting it right. If you are going to make a negatively life-altering report on someone, you'd better make sure the accusation is legitimate. |
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Most anyone would agree that the hash matching should probably form probable cause for a warrant, allowing a judge to sign off on the police searching (i.e., viewing) the image. So, if it's a collision, the cops get a warrant and open up your linux ISO or cat meme, and it's all good. Probably the ideal case is that they get a warrant to search the specific image, and are only able to obtain a warrant to search your home and effects, etc. if the image does appear to be CSAM.
At issue here is the fact that no such warrant was obtained.