Message Authentication Code (MAC) is a symmetric key cryptographic technique used to provide message authentication. The sender and receiver share a secret key, and the sender generates a MAC value using the key and message. This MAC value is sent with the message. Upon receiving the message and MAC value, the receiver uses the shared key to validate the MAC and authenticate the message sender. MAC provides message authentication but not non-repudiation, as either party could deny sending or receiving the message.
Message Authentication Code (MAC) is a symmetric key cryptographic technique used to provide message authentication. The sender and receiver share a secret key, and the sender generates a MAC value using the key and message. This MAC value is sent with the message. Upon receiving the message and MAC value, the receiver uses the shared key to validate the MAC and authenticate the message sender. MAC provides message authentication but not non-repudiation, as either party could deny sending or receiving the message.
MAC algorithm is a symmetric key cryptographic technique to provide
message authentication. For establishing MAC process, the sender and receiver share a symmetric key K.
Essentially, a MAC is an encrypted checksum generated on the
underlying message that is sent along with a message to ensure message authentication.
The process of using MAC for authentication is depicted in the following
illustration –
Let us now try to understand the entire process in detail −
The sender uses some publicly known MAC algorithm, inputs
the message and the secret key K and produces a MAC value. Similar to hash, MAC function also compresses an arbitrary long input into a fixed length output. The major difference between hash and MAC is that MAC uses secret key during the compression. The sender forwards the message along with the MAC. Here, we assume that the message is sent in the clear, as we are concerned of providing message origin authentication, not confidentiality. If confidentiality is required, then the message needs encryption. On receipt of the message and the MAC, the receiver feeds the received message and the shared secret key K into the MAC algorithm and re-computes the MAC value. The receiver now checks equality of freshly computed MAC with the MAC received from the sender. If they match, then the receiver accepts the message and assures himself that the message has been sent by the intended sender. If the computed MAC does not match the MAC sent by the sender, the receiver cannot determine whether it is the message that has been altered or it is the origin that has been falsified. As a bottom-line, a receiver safely assumes that the message is not the genuine.
Limitations of MAC
There are two major limitations of MAC, both due to its symmetric nature of operation −
Establishment of Shared Secret.
o It can provide message authentication among pre- decided legitimate users who have shared key. o This requires establishment of shared secret prior to use of MAC. Inability to Provide Non-Repudiation o Non-repudiation is the assurance that a message originator cannot deny any previously sent messages and commitments or actions. o MAC technique does not provide a non-repudiation service. If the sender and receiver get involved in a dispute over message origination, MACs cannot provide a proof that a message was indeed sent by the sender. o Though no third party can compute the MAC, still sender could deny having sent the message and claim that the receiver forged it, as it is impossible to determine which of the two parties computed the MAC.
Cryptography Hash functions
Hash functions are extremely useful and appear in almost all
information security applications. A hash function is a mathematical function that converts a numerical input value into another compressed numerical value. The input to the hash function is of arbitrary length but output is always of fixed length.
Values returned by a hash function are called message digest or
simply hash values. The following picture illustrated hash function −
Features of Hash Functions
The typical features of hash functions are −
Fixed Length Output (Hash Value)
Hash function coverts data of arbitrary length to a fixed length.
This process is often referred to as hashing the data. In general, the hash is much smaller than the input data, hence hash functions are sometimes called compression functions. Since a hash is a smaller representation of a larger data, it is also referred to as a digest. Hash function with n bit output is referred to as an n-bit hash function. Popular hash functions generate values between 160 and 512 bits.
Efficiency of Operation
Generally for any hash function h with input x, computation of
h(x) is a fast operation. omputationally hash functions are much faster than a symmetric encryption.
Cryptography Digital signatures
Digital signatures are the public-key primitives of message
authentication. In the physical world, it is common to use handwritten signatures on handwritten or typed messages. They are used to bind signatory to the message.
Similarly, a digital signature is a technique that binds a person/entity
to the digital data. This binding can be independently verified by receiver as well as any third party.
Digital signature is a cryptographic value that is calculated from the
data and a secret key known only by the signer.
In real world, the receiver of message needs assurance that the
message belongs to the sender and he should not be able to repudiate the origination of that message. This requirement is very crucial in business applications, since likelihood of a dispute over exchanged data is very high. Model of Digital Signature
As mentioned earlier, the digital signature scheme is based on public
key cryptography. The model of digital signature scheme is depicted in the following illustration −
The following points explain the entire process in detail −
Each person adopting this scheme has a public-private key pair.
Generally, the key pairs used for encryption/decryption and signing/verifying are different. The private key used for signing is referred to as the signature key and the public key as the verification key. Signer feeds data to the hash function and generates hash of data. Hash value and signature key are then fed to the signature algorithm which produces the digital signature on given hash. Signature is appended to the data and then both are sent to the verifier. Verifier feeds the digital signature and the verification key into the verification algorithm. The verification algorithm gives some value as output. Verifier also runs same hash function on received data to generate hash value. For verification, this hash value and output of verification algorithm are compared. Based on the comparison result, verifier decides whether the digital signature is valid.
Since digital signature is created by ‘private’ key of signer and no one
else can have this key; the signer cannot repudiate signing the data in future.