A blog doesn't need a clever name
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Saturday, October 09, 2004

Behind the Scenes, Officials Wrestle Over Voting Rules [Washington Post: Top News]
10:19:58 PM    comment []

Bruce Schneier on The Legacy of DES.

The Data Encryption Standard, or DES, was a mid-'70s brainchild of the National Bureau of Standards: the first modern, public, freely available encryption algorithm. For over two decades, DES was the workhorse of commercial cryptography.

Over the decades, DES has been used to protect everything from databases in mainframe computers, to the communications links between ATMs and banks, to data transmissions between police cars and police stations. Whoever you are, I can guarantee that many times in your life, the security of your data was protected by DES.

Just last month, the former National Bureau of Standards--the agency is now called the National Institute of Standards and Technology, or NIST--proposed withdrawing DES as an encryption standard, signifying the end of the federal government's most important technology standard, one more important than ASCII, I would argue.

Today, cryptography is one of the most basic tools of computer security, but 30 years ago it barely existed as an academic discipline. In the days when the Internet was little more than a curiosity, cryptography wasn't even a recognized branch of mathematics. Secret codes were always fascinating, but they were pencil-and-paper codes based on alphabets. In the secret government labs during World War II, cryptography entered the computer era and became mathematics. But with no professors teaching it, and no conferences discussing it, all the cryptographic research in the United States was conducted at the National Security Agency.

And then came DES.

Back in the early 1970s, it was a radical idea. The National Bureau of Standards decided that there should be a free encryption standard. Because the agency wanted it to be non-military, they solicited encryption algorithms from the public. They got only one serious response--the Data Encryption Standard--from the labs of IBM. In 1976, DES became the government's standard encryption algorithm for "sensitive but unclassified" traffic. This included things like personal, financial and logistical information. And simply because there was nothing else, companies began using DES whenever they needed an encryption algorithm. Of course, not everyone believed DES was secure.

When IBM submitted DES as a standard, no one outside the National Security Agency had any expertise to analyze it. The NSA made two changes to DES: It tweaked the algorithm, and it cut the key size by more than half.

The strength of an algorithm is based on two things: how good the mathematics is, and how long the key is. A sure way of breaking an algorithm is to try every possible key. Modern algorithms have a key so long that this is impossible; even if you built a computer out of all the silicon atoms on the planet and ran it for millions of years, you couldn't do it. So cryptographers look for shortcuts. If the mathematics are weak, maybe there's a way to find the key faster: "breaking" the algorithm.

The NSA's changes caused outcry among the few who paid attention, both regarding the "invisible hand" of the NSA--the tweaks were not made public, and no rationale was given for the final design--and the short key length.

But with the outcry came research. It's not an exaggeration to say that the publication of DES created the modern academic discipline of cryptography. The first academic cryptographers began their careers by trying to break DES, or at least trying to understand the NSA's tweak. And almost all of the encryption algorithms--public-key cryptography, in particular--can trace their roots back to DES. Papers analyzing different aspects of DES are still being published today.

By the mid-1990s, it became widely believed that the NSA was able to break DES by trying every possible key. This ability was demonstrated in 1998, when a $220,000 machine was built that could brute-force a DES key in a few days. In 1985, the academic community proposed a DES variant with the same mathematics but a longer key, called triple-DES. This variant had been used in more secure applications in place of DES for years, but it was time for a new standard. In 1997, NIST solicited an algorithm to replace DES.

The process illustrates the complete transformation of cryptography from a secretive NSA technology to a worldwide public technology. NIST once again solicited algorithms from the public, but this time the agency got 15 submissions from 10 countries. My own algorithm, Twofish, was one of them. And after two years of analysis and debate, NIST chose a Belgian algorithm, Rijndael, to become the Advanced Encryption Standard.

It's a different world in cryptography now than it was 30 years ago. We know more about cryptography, and have more algorithms to choose among. AES won't become a ubiquitous standard in the same way that DES did. But it is finding its way into banking security products, Internet security protocols, even computerized voting machines. A NIST standard is an imprimatur of quality and security, and vendors recognize that.

So, how good is the NSA at cryptography? They're certainly better than the academic world. They have more mathematicians working on the problems, they've been working on them longer, and they have access to everything published in the academic world, while they don't have to make their own results public. But are they a year ahead of the state of the art? Five years? A decade? No one knows.

It took the academic community two decades to figure out that the NSA "tweaks" actually improved the security of DES. This means that back in the '70s, the National Security Agency was two decades ahead of the state of the art.

Today, the NSA is still smarter, but the rest of us are catching up quickly. In 1999, the academic community discovered a weakness in another NSA algorithm, SHA, that the NSA claimed to have discovered only four years previously. And just last week there was a published analysis of the NSA's SHA-1 that demonstrated weaknesses that we believe the NSA didn't know about at all.

Maybe now we're just a couple of years behind.


This essay was originally published on CNet.com

[Schneier on Security]
8:26:39 PM    comment []

U.N. to Allow Caviar Exports, but Quota Is Cut. The wildlife protection arm of the United Nations announced Friday that it would allow Caspian Sea countries to export caviar, though at lower levels than in 2003. By By CHRISTOPHER PALA. [The New York Times > Science]
7:37:48 AM    comment []

make an ipod in to a pirate radio station.

ipod fm

i thought it was clever to boost the itrip mini with my lame little hack, and change what's playing on cars next to me at stop lights, and then this project blows that out of the broadcasting waters. be sure to check with your local laws and all that before broadcasting with this "proof of concept" itrip amp.

[unmediated]


7:34:32 AM    comment []

Documentary on "Vote for Change" tour to air. "National Anthem," a documentary film by Al Maysles and D.A. Pennebaker on the Vote for Change concert tour, will air Monday on the Sundance Channel. [Salon.com]
7:33:52 AM    comment []

Coming to a college near you: Services science?. SAN FRANCISCO - More than 40 years after Purdue University established the first department of computer science in the U.S., a whole new field of study is about to emerge in colleges and universities throughout the country, according to a researcher at IBM Corp.'s Almaden Research Center, who believes that students could begin to receive doctorate degrees in the field of "services sciences" in 10 years time. [InfoWorld: Top News]
7:32:06 AM    comment []

Are The Copyright Wars Chilling Innovation? (Business Week commentary).
. . . The legal tools that are being used to rein in bad behavior are so blunt that they block a lot of perfectly benign behavior, Felten says. That worries me.

It's a concern that reverberates broadly in tech circles at a time when Congress is considering tough new antipiracy legislation. Most people agree that the music and film industries have the right to defend themselves against illegal copying. But society needs to consider the potential impact on innovation. Many high-tech business leaders fear that new laws could hobble researchers who are trying to come up with inventions such as next-generation TV systems or even the electronic components for those inventions.

. . .

Intimidation isn't hard to spot in academia. Aviel Rubin, a Johns Hopkins University professor who last year uncovered flaws in electronic-voting software developed by Diebold Inc. (DBD ), says he spends precious time plotting legal strategies before publishing research connected in any way to copyrights. Matthew Blaze, a computer scientist at the University of Pennsylvania, avoids certain types of computer security-related research because the techniques are also used in copy protection.

The pall has spread over classrooms as well. Eugene H. Spafford, a professor and digital-security expert at Purdue University, and David Wagner, an associate professor of computer science at the University of California at Berkeley, are refusing to take on teaching assignments in certain areas relating to computer security. The problem isn't that we're worried about prosecution from the government. The problem is the civil lawsuits from the movie and music industries, Spafford says. I don't have the resources to deal with that.

. . .

Some experts warn that broad laws of this sort might restrict legitimate uses for key technologies, which could be particularly thorny for young companies that are often the most creative. In the '90s, it was upstarts who developed the first MP3 players, paving the way for a vibrant new market and Apple Computer Inc.'s (AAPL ) blockbuster iPod. If the "induce" act had been in place at the time, many legal experts say, the iPod would never have been built.

Critics of the entertainment industry are especially alarmed by assaults on generic technologies, such as peer-to-peer computing. The popular view is that I must protect the absolute interests of the copyright holder, says Gregory M. Papadopoulos, chief technology officer at Sun Microsystems Inc. (SUNW ) That's scary because I know it will slam innovation. If I can't have someone throw together the next great video system for my home because everything is going to be locked down in copyrights, then [breakthroughs by] kids in the garage won't happen.

Music and film trade groups deny that their efforts will chill innovative energies. It's easy to assert you feel chilled, but I don't see any evidence to support that, says Fritz Attaway, general counsel for the mpaa. And the record industry is resisting efforts by equipment makers and academics to modify the dmca. riaa Senior Vice-President Mitch Glazier says softening the act would give pirates a blatant right to hack.


3:43:03 AM    comment []



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