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Tuesday, December 6, 2011

Generate File Hashes Directly In Firefox

Comparing file hashes of files that you have downloaded to your computer with those provided by the provider of said downloads can be a great way of verifying that a file is genuine and that it has not been tampered with by third parties. Security only works if the sources you get the files and hashes from is trustworthy. One example would be if you uploaded a file on a server to download it later to another computer. You’d generate the hash, upload the file and verify that the hash is identical to the one that you have generated before.

MD5 Reborned Hasher is a Firefox add-on that integrates hash generating options directly in the browser’s download window. Having said that, it needs to be noted that users need to keep a history of their downloads in the browser for the add-on to work properly.

firefox download hash

The add-on places a small Check Digest link next to each download in the Downloads window of the browser. A click on the link opens a Check File window where hash files can be generated. The add-on supports the generation of MD2, MD5, SHA1, SHA256, SHA384 or SHA512 hashes. Just select the desired hash from the pulldown menu and click the Generate Digest button afterwards.

The generated checksum is then displayed in the same window. All that is left then is to copy the original hash value into the second field. The add-on compares both hashes and will notify you if they are identical or not.

Depending on the result you may either decided to quarantine or delete the file or use it on your system.

MD5 Reborned Hasher is a handy extension for Firefox users who need to verify file downloads regularly. An option to automatically generate hashes for all downloaded files would be handy but is not present in the reviewed version of the add-on.

Firefox users can download and install the extension from the official Mozilla Firefox add-on repository.


© Martin Brinkmann for gHacks Technology News | Latest Tech News, Software And Tutorials, 2011. | Permalink |
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