This was directly from slackware.com itself. I download the files and transmission-cli starts seeding. So, I go into slackware64-install-dvd-iso directory and run md5sum and gpg on the iso to check it out. md5sum --check --status *.md5;echo $? returns 1, and gpg --verify *.asc *.iso returns bad signature. Near as I can figure transmission-cli succeeded on verification with encrypted sites required and started seeding since somewhere along the way all those piece hashes and the torrent's indirect contents got corrupted. Since slackware.com was the original source, it stands to reason that sometime after release of that torrent the torrent on that site and all other sites offering that torrent got corrupted later. The file once burnt to a dvd also fails to bring up a hardware speech synthesizer I have talking when booted. So this tells me corruption was done on the source files the torrent downloads rather than the md5 file itself or slackware's gpg key. Can anyone else confirm this as a bad download? My reason for asking is that the internet provider may be interfering with bittorrent downloads or may not and information would help either prove or clear that speculation up. jude <jdashiel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> _______________________________________________ Blinux-list mailing list Blinux-list@xxxxxxxxxx https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/blinux-list