Basic HTML version of Foils prepared August 4 1997

Foil 49 Some Math Behind Secret Key Cryptography

From Remarks on Java and Internet Security Web Certificate CPS616 Enhancement -- Summer 1997 . by Geoffrey C. Fox


Secret Key algorithms are based on elaborating a simple idea
Caesar rotated alphabet in his cipher. An obvious extension of this is use a 1&#060-&#0621 permutation of a group of N bits
for DES N=64 and permutation is calculated from a 48 bit key
To make decoding harder, this is done 16 times with different keys extracted from an original 56 bit secret
  • Note secrets in real world are usually generated randomly
This strategy is combined with (ad-hoc) transformations to further obfuscate the process
The full message must be divided into blocks before this and the method of running secret key cryptography on long messages is non trivial (but not very fundamental) as doing in 64 bit separate units would allow information to be freely shuffled!



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