Mark Pilgrim's article How to make a good ID in Atom is good. Here's part of it:
Why you shouldn’t use your permalink as an Atom ID
It’s valid to use your permalink URL
as your <id>, but I discourage it
because it can create confusion about
which element should be treated as the
permalink. Developers who don’t read
specs will look at your Atom feed, and
they see two identical pieces of
information, and they pick one and use
it as the permalink, and some of them
will pick incorrectly. Then they go to
another feed where the two elements
are not identical, and they get
confused.
In Atom, <link rel="alternate"> is
always the permalink of the entry.
<id> is always a unique identifier for
the entry. Both are required, but they
serve different purposes. An entry ID
should never change, even if the
permalink changes.
“Permalink changes”? Yes, permalinks
are not as permanent as you might
think. Here’s an example that happened
to me. My permalink URLs were
automatically generated from the title
of my entry, but then I updated an
entry and changed the title. Guess
what, the “permanent” link just
changed! If you’re clever, you can use
an HTTP redirect to redirect visitors
from the old permalink to the new one
(and I did). But you can’t redirect an
ID.
The ID of an Atom entry must never
change! Ideally, you should generate
the ID of an entry once, and store it
somewhere. If you’re auto-generating
it time after time from data that
changes over time, then the entry’s ID
will change, which defeats the
purpose.