Controlled Vocabulary for: IntegrityCheckAlgorithm
LRA Vocabulary Id
a412ee28-8d8c-405a-9974-1cc2bdfd0726
Vocabulary Properties
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Version:
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1.0 |
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Status
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created |
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Date
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2010-03-01 |
Description
This algorithm is defined in FIPS PUB 180-1: Secure Hash Standard.
As of April 17, 1995
Concept set
| Level |
Code |
Description |
Notes |
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0
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SHA1 |
Secure hash algorithm 1 |
This algorithm is defined in FIPS PUB 180-1: Secure Hash Standard.
As of April 17, 1995
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|
0
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SHA256 |
Secure hash algorithm 256 |
This algorithm is defined in FIPS PUB 180-2: Secure Hash
Standard
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|
0
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LS |
Legal status |
For organizations a suffix indicating the legal status, e.g.,
"Inc.", "Co.", "AG", "GmbH", "B.V." "S.A.", "Ltd." Etc.
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|
0
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AC |
Academic |
Indicates that a prefix like "Dr." or a suffix like "M.D." or
"Ph.D." is an academic title
|
|
0
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NB |
Nobility |
In Europe and Asia, there are still people with nobility titles
(aristocrats). German "von" is generally a nobility title, not a mere
voorvoegsel. Others are "Earl of" or "His Majesty King of..." etc.
Rarely used nowadays, but some systems do keep track of
this
|
|
0
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PR |
Professional |
Primarily in the British Imperial culture people tend to have an
abbreviation of their professional organization as part of their
credential suffices
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|
0
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VV |
Voorvoegsel |
A Dutch "voorvoegsel" is something like "van" or "de" that might
have indicated nobility in the past but no longer so. Similar prefixes
exist in other languages such as Spanish, French or Portugese,
etc
|
|
0
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AD |
Adopted |
The name the person was given at the time of
adoption
|
|
0
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BR |
Birth |
A name that a person had shortly after being born. Usually for
family names but may be used to mark given names at birth that may have
changed later
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|
0
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SP |
Spouse |
The name assumed from the partner in a marital relationship. Usually
the spouse's family name. Note that no inference about gender can be
made from the existence of spouse names
|
|
0
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CL |
Call me |
A 'call me' name is usually a given name that is preferred when a
person is directly addressed. Sometimes known as a nickname
|
|
0
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IN |
Initial |
Indicates that a name part is just an initial. Initials do not imply
a trailing period since this would not work with non-Latin scripts.
Initials may consist of more than one letter, e.g., "Ph." could stand
for "Philippe" or "Th." for "Thomas"
|
|
0
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TITLE |
Title |
Indicates that a prefix or a suffix is a title that applies to the
whole name, not just the adjacent name part
|