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Ch09 Public-Key Cryptosystems

Public key cryptography uses two keys: a public key that can encrypt messages and verify signatures, and a private key that decrypts messages and creates signatures. RSA is a widely used public key cryptosystem that is based on the mathematical difficulty of factoring large prime numbers. It generates public/private key pairs by selecting prime numbers and using them to encrypt/decrypt messages. While computationally intensive, RSA is secure because there is no known efficient way to derive the private key from the public key and modulus.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
185 views20 pages

Ch09 Public-Key Cryptosystems

Public key cryptography uses two keys: a public key that can encrypt messages and verify signatures, and a private key that decrypts messages and creates signatures. RSA is a widely used public key cryptosystem that is based on the mathematical difficulty of factoring large prime numbers. It generates public/private key pairs by selecting prime numbers and using them to encrypt/decrypt messages. While computationally intensive, RSA is secure because there is no known efficient way to derive the private key from the public key and modulus.

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Shashi Singh
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© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
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Cryptography and Network

Security

Public Key Cryptography and RSA


Private-Key Cryptography
• traditional private/secret/single key
cryptography uses one key
• shared by both sender and receiver
• if this key is disclosed communications are
compromised
• also is symmetric, parties are equal
• hence does not protect sender from
receiver forging a message & claiming is
sent by sender
Public-Key Cryptography
• uses two keys – a public & a private key
• asymmetric since parties are not equal
• uses clever application of number
theoretic concepts to function
• Asymmetric encryption can be used for
confidentiality, authentication or both
Public-Key Cryptography
• public-key/two-key/asymmetric cryptography
involves the use of two keys:
– a public-key, which may be known by anybody, and
can be used to encrypt messages, and verify
signatures
– a private-key, known only to the recipient, used to
decrypt messages, and sign (create) signatures
• is asymmetric because
– those who encrypt messages or verify signatures
cannot decrypt messages or create signatures
Public-Key Cryptography
Why Public-Key Cryptography?
• developed to address two key issues:
– key distribution – how to have secure
communications in general without having to
trust a KDC with your key
– digital signatures – how to verify a message
comes intact from the claimed sender
• Whitfield Diffie & Martin Hellman at
Stanford Uni first publicly introduced
Public key cryptography in 1976
Public-Key Characteristics
• Public-Key algorithms rely on two keys
with the characteristics that it is:
– computationally infeasible to find decryption
key knowing only algorithm & encryption key
– computationally easy to en/decrypt messages
when the relevant (en/decrypt) key is known
– either of the two related keys can be used for
encryption, with the other used for decryption
(in some schemes)
Public-Key Cryptosystems
Public-Key Applications
• can classify uses into 3 categories:
– encryption/decryption (provide secrecy)
– digital signatures (provide authentication)
– key exchange (of session keys)
• some algorithms are suitable for all uses,
others are specific to one
Security of Public Key Schemes
• like private key schemes brute force exhaustive
search attack is always theoretically possible
• but keys used are too large (>512bits)
• security relies on a large enough difference in
difficulty between easy (en/decrypt) and hard
(cryptanalyse) problems
• more generally the hard problem is known, its
just made too hard to do in practise
• requires the use of very large numbers
• hence is slow compared to private key schemes
RSA
• by Rivest, Shamir & Adleman of MIT in 1977
• best known & widely used public-key scheme
• based on exponentiation in a finite (Galois) field
over integers modulo a prime
– nb. exponentiation takes O((log n)3) operations (easy)
• uses large integers (eg. 1024 bits)
• security due to cost of factoring large numbers
– nb. factorization takes O(e log n log log n) operations (hard)
RSA Key Setup
• each user generates a public/private key pair by:
• selecting two large primes at random - p, q
• computing their system modulus N=p.q
– note ø(N)=(p-1)(q-1)
• selecting at random the encryption key e
• where 1<e<ø(N), gcd(e,ø(N))=1
• solve following equation to find decryption key d
– e.d=1 mod ø(N) and 0≤d≤N
• publish their public encryption key: KU={e,N}
• keep secret private decryption key: KR={d,p,q}
RSA Use
• to encrypt a message M the sender:
– obtains public key of recipient KU={e,N}
– computes: C=Me mod N, where 0≤M<N
• to decrypt the ciphertext C the owner:
– uses their private key KR={d,p,q}
– computes: M=Cd mod N
• note that the message M must be smaller
than the modulus N (block if needed)
RSA Example
1. Select primes: p=17 & q=11
2. Compute n = pq =17×11=187
3. Compute ø(n)=(p–1)(q-1)=16×10=160
4. Select e : gcd(e,160)=1; choose e=7
5. Determine d: de=1 mod 160 and d < 160
Value is d=23 since 23×7=161= 10×160+1
6. Publish public key KU={7,187}
7. Keep secret private key KR={23,17,11}
RSA Example cont
• sample RSA encryption/decryption is:
• given message M = 88 (nb. 88<187)
• encryption:
C = 887 mod 187 = 11
• decryption:
M = 1123 mod 187 = 88
RSA Key Generation
• users of RSA must:
– determine two primes at random - p, q
– select either e or d and compute the other
• primes p,q must not be easily derived
from modulus N=p.q
– means must be sufficiently large
– typically guess and use probabilistic test
• exponents e, d are inverses, so use
Inverse algorithm to compute the other
RSA Security
• three approaches to attacking RSA:
– brute force key search (infeasible given size
of numbers)
– mathematical attacks (based on difficulty of
computing ø(N), by factoring modulus N)
– timing attacks (on running of decryption)
Factoring Problem
• mathematical approach takes 3 forms:
– factor N=p.q, hence find ø(N) and then d
– determine ø(N) directly and find d
– find d directly
• currently believe all equivalent to factoring
– have seen slow improvements over the years
• as of Aug-99 best is 130 decimal digits (512) bit with GNFS
– biggest improvement comes from improved algorithm
• cf “Quadratic Sieve” to “Generalized Number Field Sieve”
– barring dramatic breakthrough 1024+ bit RSA secure
• ensure p, q of similar size and matching other constraints
Timing Attacks
• developed in mid-1990’s
• exploit timing variations in operations
– eg. multiplying by small vs large number
– or IF's varying which instructions executed
• infer operand size based on time taken
• RSA exploits time taken in exponentiation
• countermeasures
– use constant exponentiation time
– add random delays
– blind values used in calculations
Summary
• have considered:
– principles of public-key cryptography
– RSA algorithm, implementation, security

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