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RSA (cryptosystem)

RSA (Rivest–Shamir–Adleman) is a public-key cryptosystem, one of the oldest widely used for secure data transmission. The initialism "RSA" comes from the surnames of Ron Rivest, Adi Shamir and Leonard Adleman, who publicly described the algorithm in 1977. An equivalent system was developed secretly in 1973 at Government Communications Headquarters (GCHQ), the British signals intelligence agency, by the English mathematician Clifford Cocks. That system was declassified in 1997.[2]

RSA
General
DesignersRon Rivest,[1] Adi Shamir, and Leonard Adleman
First published1977
CertificationPKCS#1, ANSI X9.31
Cipher detail
Key sizesvariable but 2,048 to 4,096 bit typically
Rounds1
Best public cryptanalysis
General number field sieve for classical computers;
Shor's algorithm for quantum computers.
An 829-bit key has been broken.

In a public-key cryptosystem, the encryption key is public and distinct from the decryption key, which is kept secret (private). An RSA user creates and publishes a public key based on two large prime numbers, along with an auxiliary value. The prime numbers are kept secret. Messages can be encrypted by anyone, via the public key, but can only be decrypted by someone who knows the private key.[1]

The security of RSA relies on the practical difficulty of factoring the product of two large prime numbers, the "factoring problem". Breaking RSA encryption is known as the RSA problem. Whether it is as difficult as the factoring problem is an open question.[3] There are no published methods to defeat the system if a large enough key is used.

RSA is a relatively slow algorithm. Because of this, it is not commonly used to directly encrypt user data. More often, RSA is used to transmit shared keys for symmetric-key cryptography, which are then used for bulk encryption–decryption.

History edit

 
Adi Shamir, co-inventor of RSA (the others are Ron Rivest and Leonard Adleman)

The idea of an asymmetric public-private key cryptosystem is attributed to Whitfield Diffie and Martin Hellman, who published this concept in 1976. They also introduced digital signatures and attempted to apply number theory. Their formulation used a shared-secret-key created from exponentiation of some number, modulo a prime number. However, they left open the problem of realizing a one-way function, possibly because the difficulty of factoring was not well-studied at the time.[4] Moreover, like Diffie-Hellman, RSA is based on modular exponentiation.

Ron Rivest, Adi Shamir, and Leonard Adleman at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology made several attempts over the course of a year to create a function that was hard to invert. Rivest and Shamir, as computer scientists, proposed many potential functions, while Adleman, as a mathematician, was responsible for finding their weaknesses. They tried many approaches, including "knapsack-based" and "permutation polynomials". For a time, they thought what they wanted to achieve was impossible due to contradictory requirements.[5] In April 1977, they spent Passover at the house of a student and drank a good deal of wine before returning to their homes at around midnight.[6] Rivest, unable to sleep, lay on the couch with a math textbook and started thinking about their one-way function. He spent the rest of the night formalizing his idea, and he had much of the paper ready by daybreak. The algorithm is now known as RSA – the initials of their surnames in same order as their paper.[7]

Clifford Cocks, an English mathematician working for the British intelligence agency Government Communications Headquarters (GCHQ), described a similar system in an internal document in 1973.[8] However, given the relatively expensive computers needed to implement it at the time, it was considered to be mostly a curiosity and, as far as is publicly known, was never deployed. His ideas and concepts, were not revealed until 1997 due to its top-secret classification.

Kid-RSA (KRSA) is a simplified, insecure public-key cipher published in 1997, designed for educational purposes. Some people feel that learning Kid-RSA gives insight into RSA and other public-key ciphers, analogous to simplified DES.[9][10][11][12][13]

Patent edit

A patent describing the RSA algorithm was granted to MIT on 20 September 1983: U.S. patent 4,405,829 "Cryptographic communications system and method". From DWPI's abstract of the patent:

The system includes a communications channel coupled to at least one terminal having an encoding device and to at least one terminal having a decoding device. A message-to-be-transferred is enciphered to ciphertext at the encoding terminal by encoding the message as a number M in a predetermined set. That number is then raised to a first predetermined power (associated with the intended receiver) and finally computed. The remainder or residue, C, is... computed when the exponentiated number is divided by the product of two predetermined prime numbers (associated with the intended receiver).

A detailed description of the algorithm was published in August 1977, in Scientific American's Mathematical Games column.[7] This preceded the patent's filing date of December 1977. Consequently, the patent had no legal standing outside the United States. Had Cocks' work been publicly known, a patent in the United States would not have been legal either.

When the patent was issued, terms of patent were 17 years. The patent was about to expire on 21 September 2000, but RSA Security released the algorithm to the public domain on 6 September 2000.[14]

Operation edit

The RSA algorithm involves four steps: key generation, key distribution, encryption, and decryption.

A basic principle behind RSA is the observation that it is practical to find three very large positive integers e, d, and n, such that for all integers m (0 ≤ m < n), both   and   have the same remainder when divided by   (they are congruent modulo  ):

 
However, when given only e and n, it is extremely difficult to find d.

The integers n and e comprise the public key, d represents the private key, and m represents the message. The modular exponentiation to e and d corresponds to encryption and decryption, respectively.

In addition, because the two exponents can be swapped, the private and public key can also be swapped, allowing for message signing and verification using the same algorithm.

Key generation edit

The keys for the RSA algorithm are generated in the following way:

  1. Choose two large prime numbers p and q.
    • To make factoring harder, p and q should be chosen at random, be both large and have a large difference.[1] For choosing them the standard method is to choose random integers and use a primality test until two primes are found.
    • p and q should be kept secret.
  2. Compute n = pq.
    • n is used as the modulus for both the public and private keys. Its length, usually expressed in bits, is the key length.
    • n is released as part of the public key.
  3. Compute λ(n), where λ is Carmichael's totient function. Since n = pq, λ(n) = lcm(λ(p), λ(q)), and since p and q are prime, λ(p) = φ(p) = p − 1, and likewise λ(q) = q − 1. Hence λ(n) = lcm(p − 1, q − 1).
    • The lcm may be calculated through the Euclidean algorithm, since lcm(ab) = |ab|/gcd(ab).
    • λ(n) is kept secret.
  4. Choose an integer e such that 1 < e < λ(n) and gcd(e, λ(n)) = 1; that is, e and λ(n) are coprime.
    • e having a short bit-length and small Hamming weight results in more efficient encryption – the most commonly chosen value for e is 216 + 1 = 65537. The smallest (and fastest) possible value for e is 3, but such a small value for e has been shown to be less secure in some settings.[15]
    • e is released as part of the public key.
  5. Determine d as de−1 (mod λ(n)); that is, d is the modular multiplicative inverse of e modulo λ(n).
    • This means: solve for d the equation de ≡ 1 (mod λ(n)); d can be computed efficiently by using the extended Euclidean algorithm, since, thanks to e and λ(n) being coprime, said equation is a form of Bézout's identity, where d is one of the coefficients.
    • d is kept secret as the private key exponent.

The public key consists of the modulus n and the public (or encryption) exponent e. The private key consists of the private (or decryption) exponent d, which must be kept secret. p, q, and λ(n) must also be kept secret because they can be used to calculate d. In fact, they can all be discarded after d has been computed.[16]

In the original RSA paper,[1] the Euler totient function φ(n) = (p − 1)(q − 1) is used instead of λ(n) for calculating the private exponent d. Since φ(n) is always divisible by λ(n), the algorithm works as well. The possibility of using Euler totient function results also from Lagrange's theorem applied to the multiplicative group of integers modulo pq. Thus any d satisfying de ≡ 1 (mod φ(n)) also satisfies de ≡ 1 (mod λ(n)). However, computing d modulo φ(n) will sometimes yield a result that is larger than necessary (i.e. d > λ(n)). Most of the implementations of RSA will accept exponents generated using either method (if they use the private exponent d at all, rather than using the optimized decryption method based on the Chinese remainder theorem described below), but some standards such as FIPS 186-4 (Section B.3.1) may require that d < λ(n). Any "oversized" private exponents not meeting this criterion may always be reduced modulo λ(n) to obtain a smaller equivalent exponent.

Since any common factors of (p − 1) and (q − 1) are present in the factorisation of n − 1 = pq − 1 = (p − 1)(q − 1) + (p − 1) + (q − 1),[17][self-published source?] it is recommended that (p − 1) and (q − 1) have only very small common factors, if any, besides the necessary 2.[1][18][19][failed verification][20][failed verification]

Note: The authors of the original RSA paper carry out the key generation by choosing d and then computing e as the modular multiplicative inverse of d modulo φ(n), whereas most current implementations of RSA, such as those following PKCS#1, do the reverse (choose e and compute d). Since the chosen key can be small, whereas the computed key normally is not, the RSA paper's algorithm optimizes decryption compared to encryption, while the modern algorithm optimizes encryption instead.[1][21]

Key distribution edit

Suppose that Bob wants to send information to Alice. If they decide to use RSA, Bob must know Alice's public key to encrypt the message, and Alice must use her private key to decrypt the message.

To enable Bob to send his encrypted messages, Alice transmits her public key (n, e) to Bob via a reliable, but not necessarily secret, route. Alice's private key (d) is never distributed.

Encryption edit

After Bob obtains Alice's public key, he can send a message M to Alice.

To do it, he first turns M (strictly speaking, the un-padded plaintext) into an integer m (strictly speaking, the padded plaintext), such that 0 ≤ m < n by using an agreed-upon reversible protocol known as a padding scheme. He then computes the ciphertext c, using Alice's public key e, corresponding to

 

This can be done reasonably quickly, even for very large numbers, using modular exponentiation. Bob then transmits c to Alice. Note that at least nine values of m will yield a ciphertext c equal to m,[a] but this is very unlikely to occur in practice.

Decryption edit

Alice can recover m from c by using her private key exponent d by computing

 

Given m, she can recover the original message M by reversing the padding scheme.

Example edit

Here is an example of RSA encryption and decryption:[b]

  1. Choose two distinct prime numbers, such as
      and  .
  2. Compute n = pq giving
     
  3. Compute the Carmichael's totient function of the product as λ(n) = lcm(p − 1, q − 1) giving
     
  4. Choose any number 2 < e < 780 that is coprime to 780. Choosing a prime number for e leaves us only to check that e is not a divisor of 780.
    Let  .
  5. Compute d, the modular multiplicative inverse of e (mod λ(n)), yielding
     
    as  

The public key is (n = 3233, e = 17). For a padded plaintext message m, the encryption function is

 

The private key is (n = 3233, d = 413). For an encrypted ciphertext c, the decryption function is

 

For instance, in order to encrypt m = 65, one calculates

 

To decrypt c = 2790, one calculates

 

Both of these calculations can be computed efficiently using the square-and-multiply algorithm for modular exponentiation. In real-life situations the primes selected would be much larger; in our example it would be trivial to factor n = 3233 (obtained from the freely available public key) back to the primes p and q. e, also from the public key, is then inverted to get d, thus acquiring the private key.

Practical implementations use the Chinese remainder theorem to speed up the calculation using modulus of factors (mod pq using mod p and mod q).

The values dp, dq and qinv, which are part of the private key are computed as follows:

 

Here is how dp, dq and qinv are used for efficient decryption (encryption is efficient by choice of a suitable d and e pair):

 

Signing messages edit

Suppose Alice uses Bob's public key to send him an encrypted message. In the message, she can claim to be Alice, but Bob has no way of verifying that the message was from Alice, since anyone can use Bob's public key to send him encrypted messages. In order to verify the origin of a message, RSA can also be used to sign a message.

Suppose Alice wishes to send a signed message to Bob. She can use her own private key to do so. She produces a hash value of the message, raises it to the power of d (modulo n) (as she does when decrypting a message), and attaches it as a "signature" to the message. When Bob receives the signed message, he uses the same hash algorithm in conjunction with Alice's public key. He raises the signature to the power of e (modulo n) (as he does when encrypting a message), and compares the resulting hash value with the message's hash value. If the two agree, he knows that the author of the message was in possession of Alice's private key and that the message has not been tampered with since being sent.

This works because of exponentiation rules:

 
 

Thus the keys may be swapped without loss of generality, that is, a private key of a key pair may be used either to:

  1. Decrypt a message only intended for the recipient, which may be encrypted by anyone having the public key (asymmetric encrypted transport).
  2. Encrypt a message which may be decrypted by anyone, but which can only be encrypted by one person; this provides a digital signature.

Proofs of correctness edit

Proof using Fermat's little theorem edit

The proof of the correctness of RSA is based on Fermat's little theorem, stating that ap − 1 ≡ 1 (mod p) for any integer a and prime p, not dividing a.[note 1]

We want to show that

 
for every integer m when p and q are distinct prime numbers and e and d are positive integers satisfying ed ≡ 1 (mod λ(pq)).

Since λ(pq) = lcm(p − 1, q − 1) is, by construction, divisible by both p − 1 and q − 1, we can write

 
for some nonnegative integers h and k.[note 2]

To check whether two numbers, such as med and m, are congruent mod pq, it suffices (and in fact is equivalent) to check that they are congruent mod p and mod q separately.[note 3]

To show medm (mod p), we consider two cases:

  1. If m ≡ 0 (mod p), m is a multiple of p. Thus med is a multiple of p. So med ≡ 0 ≡ m (mod p).
  2. If m   0 (mod p),
     
    where we used Fermat's little theorem to replace mp−1 mod p with 1.

The verification that medm (mod q) proceeds in a completely analogous way:

  1. If m ≡ 0 (mod q), med is a multiple of q. So med ≡ 0 ≡ m (mod q).
  2. If m   0 (mod q),
     

This completes the proof that, for any integer m, and integers e, d such that ed ≡ 1 (mod λ(pq)),

 

Notes edit

  1. ^ We cannot trivially break RSA by applying the theorem (mod pq) because pq is not prime.
  2. ^ In particular, the statement above holds for any e and d that satisfy ed ≡ 1 (mod (p − 1)(q − 1)), since (p − 1)(q − 1) is divisible by λ(pq), and thus trivially also by p − 1 and q − 1. However, in modern implementations of RSA, it is common to use a reduced private exponent d that only satisfies the weaker, but sufficient condition ed ≡ 1 (mod λ(pq)).
  3. ^ This is part of the Chinese remainder theorem, although it is not the significant part of that theorem.

Proof using Euler's theorem edit

Although the original paper of Rivest, Shamir, and Adleman used Fermat's little theorem to explain why RSA works, it is common to find proofs that rely instead on Euler's theorem.

We want to show that medm (mod n), where n = pq is a product of two different prime numbers, and e and d are positive integers satisfying ed ≡ 1 (mod φ(n)). Since e and d are positive, we can write ed = 1 + (n) for some non-negative integer h. Assuming that m is relatively prime to n, we have

 

where the second-last congruence follows from Euler's theorem.

More generally, for any e and d satisfying ed ≡ 1 (mod λ(n)), the same conclusion follows from Carmichael's generalization of Euler's theorem, which states that mλ(n) ≡ 1 (mod n) for all m relatively prime to n.

When m is not relatively prime to n, the argument just given is invalid. This is highly improbable (only a proportion of 1/p + 1/q − 1/(pq) numbers have this property), but even in this case, the desired congruence is still true. Either m ≡ 0 (mod p) or m ≡ 0 (mod q), and these cases can be treated using the previous proof.

Padding edit

Attacks against plain RSA edit

There are a number of attacks against plain RSA as described below.

  • When encrypting with low encryption exponents (e.g., e = 3) and small values of the m (i.e., m < n1/e), the result of me is strictly less than the modulus n. In this case, ciphertexts can be decrypted easily by taking the eth root of the ciphertext over the integers.
  • If the same clear-text message is sent to e or more recipients in an encrypted way, and the receivers share the same exponent e, but different p, q, and therefore n, then it is easy to decrypt the original clear-text message via the Chinese remainder theorem. Johan Håstad noticed that this attack is possible even if the clear texts are not equal, but the attacker knows a linear relation between them.[22] This attack was later improved by Don Coppersmith (see Coppersmith's attack).[23]
  • Because RSA encryption is a deterministic encryption algorithm (i.e., has no random component) an attacker can successfully launch a chosen plaintext attack against the cryptosystem, by encrypting likely plaintexts under the public key and test whether they are equal to the ciphertext. A cryptosystem is called semantically secure if an attacker cannot distinguish two encryptions from each other, even if the attacker knows (or has chosen) the corresponding plaintexts. RSA without padding is not semantically secure.[24]
  • RSA has the property that the product of two ciphertexts is equal to the encryption of the product of the respective plaintexts. That is, m1em2e ≡ (m1m2)e (mod n). Because of this multiplicative property, a chosen-ciphertext attack is possible. E.g., an attacker who wants to know the decryption of a ciphertext cme (mod n) may ask the holder of the private key d to decrypt an unsuspicious-looking ciphertext c′ ≡ cre (mod n) for some value r chosen by the attacker. Because of the multiplicative property, c' is the encryption of mr (mod n). Hence, if the attacker is successful with the attack, they will learn mr (mod n), from which they can derive the message m by multiplying mr with the modular inverse of r modulo n.[citation needed]
  • Given the private exponent d, one can efficiently factor the modulus n = pq. And given factorization of the modulus n = pq, one can obtain any private key (d', n) generated against a public key (e', n).[15]

Padding schemes edit

To avoid these problems, practical RSA implementations typically embed some form of structured, randomized padding into the value m before encrypting it. This padding ensures that m does not fall into the range of insecure plaintexts, and that a given message, once padded, will encrypt to one of a large number of different possible ciphertexts.

Standards such as PKCS#1 have been carefully designed to securely pad messages prior to RSA encryption. Because these schemes pad the plaintext m with some number of additional bits, the size of the un-padded message M must be somewhat smaller. RSA padding schemes must be carefully designed so as to prevent sophisticated attacks that may be facilitated by a predictable message structure. Early versions of the PKCS#1 standard (up to version 1.5) used a construction that appears to make RSA semantically secure. However, at Crypto 1998, Bleichenbacher showed that this version is vulnerable to a practical adaptive chosen-ciphertext attack. Furthermore, at Eurocrypt 2000, Coron et al.[25] showed that for some types of messages, this padding does not provide a high enough level of security. Later versions of the standard include Optimal Asymmetric Encryption Padding (OAEP), which prevents these attacks. As such, OAEP should be used in any new application, and PKCS#1 v1.5 padding should be replaced wherever possible. The PKCS#1 standard also incorporates processing schemes designed to provide additional security for RSA signatures, e.g. the Probabilistic Signature Scheme for RSA (RSA-PSS).

Secure padding schemes such as RSA-PSS are as essential for the security of message signing as they are for message encryption. Two USA patents on PSS were granted (U.S. patent 6,266,771 and U.S. patent 7,036,014); however, these patents expired on 24 July 2009 and 25 April 2010 respectively. Use of PSS no longer seems to be encumbered by patents.[original research?] Note that using different RSA key pairs for encryption and signing is potentially more secure.[26]

Security and practical considerations edit

Using the Chinese remainder algorithm edit

For efficiency, many popular crypto libraries (such as OpenSSL, Java and .NET) use for decryption and signing the following optimization based on the Chinese remainder theorem.[citation needed] The following values are precomputed and stored as part of the private key:

  •   and   – the primes from the key generation,
  •  
  •  
  •  

These values allow the recipient to compute the exponentiation m = cd (mod pq) more efficiently as follows:
      ,
      ,
      ,[c]
      .

This is more efficient than computing exponentiation by squaring, even though two modular exponentiations have to be computed. The reason is that these two modular exponentiations both use a smaller exponent and a smaller modulus.

Integer factorization and the RSA problem edit

The security of the RSA cryptosystem is based on two mathematical problems: the problem of factoring large numbers and the RSA problem. Full decryption of an RSA ciphertext is thought to be infeasible on the assumption that both of these problems are hard, i.e., no efficient algorithm exists for solving them. Providing security against partial decryption may require the addition of a secure padding scheme.[27]

The RSA problem is defined as the task of taking eth roots modulo a composite n: recovering a value m such that cme (mod n), where (n, e) is an RSA public key, and c is an RSA ciphertext. Currently the most promising approach to solving the RSA problem is to factor the modulus n. With the ability to recover prime factors, an attacker can compute the secret exponent d from a public key (n, e), then decrypt c using the standard procedure. To accomplish this, an attacker factors n into p and q, and computes lcm(p − 1, q − 1) that allows the determination of d from e. No polynomial-time method for factoring large integers on a classical computer has yet been found, but it has not been proven that none exists; see integer factorization for a discussion of this problem.

Multiple polynomial quadratic sieve (MPQS) can be used to factor the public modulus n.

The first RSA-512 factorization in 1999 used hundreds of computers and required the equivalent of 8,400 MIPS years, over an elapsed time of about seven months.[28] By 2009, Benjamin Moody could factor an 512-bit RSA key in 73 days using only public software (GGNFS) and his desktop computer (a dual-core Athlon64 with a 1,900 MHz CPU). Just less than 5 gigabytes of disk storage was required and about 2.5 gigabytes of RAM for the sieving process.

Rivest, Shamir, and Adleman noted[1] that Miller has shown that – assuming the truth of the extended Riemann hypothesis – finding d from n and e is as hard as factoring n into p and q (up to a polynomial time difference).[29] However, Rivest, Shamir, and Adleman noted, in section IX/D of their paper, that they had not found a proof that inverting RSA is as hard as factoring.

As of 2020, the largest publicly known factored RSA number had 829 bits (250 decimal digits, RSA-250).[30] Its factorization, by a state-of-the-art distributed implementation, took about 2,700 CPU-years. In practice, RSA keys are typically 1024 to 4096 bits long. In 2003, RSA Security estimated that 1024-bit keys were likely to become crackable by 2010.[31] As of 2020, it is not known whether such keys can be cracked, but minimum recommendations have moved to at least 2048 bits.[32] It is generally presumed that RSA is secure if n is sufficiently large, outside of quantum computing.

If n is 300 bits or shorter, it can be factored in a few hours in a personal computer, using software already freely available. Keys of 512 bits have been shown to be practically breakable in 1999, when RSA-155 was factored by using several hundred computers, and these are now factored in a few weeks using common hardware. Exploits using 512-bit code-signing certificates that may have been factored were reported in 2011.[33] A theoretical hardware device named TWIRL, described by Shamir and Tromer in 2003, called into question the security of 1024-bit keys.[31]

In 1994, Peter Shor showed that a quantum computer – if one could ever be practically created for the purpose – would be able to factor in polynomial time, breaking RSA; see Shor's algorithm.

Faulty key generation edit

Finding the large primes p and q is usually done by testing random numbers of the correct size with probabilistic primality tests that quickly eliminate virtually all of the nonprimes.

The numbers p and q should not be "too close", lest the Fermat factorization for n be successful. If pq is less than 2n1/4 (n = pq, which even for "small" 1024-bit values of n is 3×1077), solving for p and q is trivial. Furthermore, if either p − 1 or q − 1 has only small prime factors, n can be factored quickly by Pollard's p − 1 algorithm, and hence such values of p or q should be discarded.

It is important that the private exponent d be large enough. Michael J. Wiener showed that if p is between q and 2q (which is quite typical) and d < n1/4/3, then d can be computed efficiently from n and e.[34]

There is no known attack against small public exponents such as e = 3, provided that the proper padding is used. Coppersmith's attack has many applications in attacking RSA specifically if the public exponent e is small and if the encrypted message is short and not padded. 65537 is a commonly used value for e; this value can be regarded as a compromise between avoiding potential small-exponent attacks and still allowing efficient encryptions (or signature verification). The NIST Special Publication on Computer Security (SP 800-78 Rev. 1 of August 2007) does not allow public exponents e smaller than 65537, but does not state a reason for this restriction.

In October 2017, a team of researchers from Masaryk University announced the ROCA vulnerability, which affects RSA keys generated by an algorithm embodied in a library from Infineon known as RSALib. A large number of smart cards and trusted platform modules (TPM) were shown to be affected. Vulnerable RSA keys are easily identified using a test program the team released.[35]

Importance of strong random number generation edit

A cryptographically strong random number generator, which has been properly seeded with adequate entropy, must be used to generate the primes p and q. An analysis comparing millions of public keys gathered from the Internet was carried out in early 2012 by Arjen K. Lenstra, James P. Hughes, Maxime Augier, Joppe W. Bos, Thorsten Kleinjung and Christophe Wachter. They were able to factor 0.2% of the keys using only Euclid's algorithm.[36][37][self-published source?]

They exploited a weakness unique to cryptosystems based on integer factorization. If n = pq is one public key, and n′ = pq is another, then if by chance p = p (but q is not equal to q'), then a simple computation of gcd(n, n′) = p factors both n and n', totally compromising both keys. Lenstra et al. note that this problem can be minimized by using a strong random seed of bit length twice the intended security level, or by employing a deterministic function to choose q given p, instead of choosing p and q independently.

Nadia Heninger was part of a group that did a similar experiment. They used an idea of Daniel J. Bernstein to compute the GCD of each RSA key n against the product of all the other keys n' they had found (a 729-million-digit number), instead of computing each gcd(n, n′) separately, thereby achieving a very significant speedup, since after one large division, the GCD problem is of normal size.

Heninger says in her blog that the bad keys occurred almost entirely in embedded applications, including "firewalls, routers, VPN devices, remote server administration devices, printers, projectors, and VOIP phones" from more than 30 manufacturers. Heninger explains that the one-shared-prime problem uncovered by the two groups results from situations where the pseudorandom number generator is poorly seeded initially, and then is reseeded between the generation of the first and second primes. Using seeds of sufficiently high entropy obtained from key stroke timings or electronic diode noise or atmospheric noise from a radio receiver tuned between stations should solve the problem.[38]

Strong random number generation is important throughout every phase of public-key cryptography. For instance, if a weak generator is used for the symmetric keys that are being distributed by RSA, then an eavesdropper could bypass RSA and guess the symmetric keys directly.

Timing attacks edit

Kocher described a new attack on RSA in 1995: if the attacker Eve knows Alice's hardware in sufficient detail and is able to measure the decryption times for several known ciphertexts, Eve can deduce the decryption key d quickly. This attack can also be applied against the RSA signature scheme. In 2003, Boneh and Brumley demonstrated a more practical attack capable of recovering RSA factorizations over a network connection (e.g., from a Secure Sockets Layer (SSL)-enabled webserver).[39] This attack takes advantage of information leaked by the Chinese remainder theorem optimization used by many RSA implementations.

One way to thwart these attacks is to ensure that the decryption operation takes a constant amount of time for every ciphertext. However, this approach can significantly reduce performance. Instead, most RSA implementations use an alternate technique known as cryptographic blinding. RSA blinding makes use of the multiplicative property of RSA. Instead of computing cd (mod n), Alice first chooses a secret random value r and computes (rec)d (mod n). The result of this computation, after applying Euler's theorem, is rcd (mod n), and so the effect of r can be removed by multiplying by its inverse. A new value of r is chosen for each ciphertext. With blinding applied, the decryption time is no longer correlated to the value of the input ciphertext, and so the timing attack fails.

Adaptive chosen-ciphertext attacks edit

In 1998, Daniel Bleichenbacher described the first practical adaptive chosen-ciphertext attack against RSA-encrypted messages using the PKCS #1 v1 padding scheme (a padding scheme randomizes and adds structure to an RSA-encrypted message, so it is possible to determine whether a decrypted message is valid). Due to flaws with the PKCS #1 scheme, Bleichenbacher was able to mount a practical attack against RSA implementations of the Secure Sockets Layer protocol and to recover session keys. As a result of this work, cryptographers now recommend the use of provably secure padding schemes such as Optimal Asymmetric Encryption Padding, and RSA Laboratories has released new versions of PKCS #1 that are not vulnerable to these attacks.

A variant of this attack, dubbed "BERserk", came back in 2014.[40][41] It impacted the Mozilla NSS Crypto Library, which was used notably by Firefox and Chrome.

Side-channel analysis attacks edit

A side-channel attack using branch-prediction analysis (BPA) has been described. Many processors use a branch predictor to determine whether a conditional branch in the instruction flow of a program is likely to be taken or not. Often these processors also implement simultaneous multithreading (SMT). Branch-prediction analysis attacks use a spy process to discover (statistically) the private key when processed with these processors.

Simple Branch Prediction Analysis (SBPA) claims to improve BPA in a non-statistical way. In their paper, "On the Power of Simple Branch Prediction Analysis",[42] the authors of SBPA (Onur Aciicmez and Cetin Kaya Koc) claim to have discovered 508 out of 512 bits of an RSA key in 10 iterations.

A power-fault attack on RSA implementations was described in 2010.[43][self-published source?] The author recovered the key by varying the CPU power voltage outside limits; this caused multiple power faults on the server.

Tricky implementation edit

There are many details to keep in mind in order to implement RSA securely (strong PRNG, acceptable public exponent, etc.). This makes the implementation challenging, to the point the book Practical Cryptography With Go suggests avoiding RSA if possible.[44]

Implementations edit

Some cryptography libraries that provide support for RSA include:

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Namely, the values of m which are equal to −1, 0, or 1 modulo p while also equal to −1, 0, or 1 modulo q. There will be more values of m having c = m if p − 1 or q − 1 has other divisors in common with e − 1 besides 2 because this gives more values of m such that   or   respectively.
  2. ^ The parameters used here are artificially small, but one can also OpenSSL can also be used to generate and examine a real keypair.
  3. ^ If  , then some[clarification needed] libraries compute h as  .

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g Rivest, R.; Shamir, A.; Adleman, L. (February 1978). (PDF). Communications of the ACM. 21 (2): 120–126. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.607.2677. doi:10.1145/359340.359342. S2CID 2873616. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2023-01-27.
  2. ^ Smart, Nigel (February 19, 2008). "Dr Clifford Cocks CB". Bristol University. Retrieved August 14, 2011.
  3. ^ Castelvecchi, Davide (2020-10-30). "Quantum-computing pioneer warns of complacency over Internet security". Nature. 587 (7833): 189. Bibcode:2020Natur.587..189C. doi:10.1038/d41586-020-03068-9. PMID 33139910. S2CID 226243008. 2020 interview of Peter Shor.
  4. ^ Diffie, W.; Hellman, M. E. (November 1976). "New directions in cryptography". IEEE Transactions on Information Theory. 22 (6): 644–654. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.37.9720. doi:10.1109/TIT.1976.1055638. ISSN 0018-9448.
  5. ^ Rivest, Ronald. "The Early Days of RSA – History and Lessons" (PDF).
  6. ^ Calderbank, Michael (2007-08-20). "The RSA Cryptosystem: History, Algorithm, Primes" (PDF).
  7. ^ a b Robinson, Sara (June 2003). "Still Guarding Secrets after Years of Attacks, RSA Earns Accolades for its Founders" (PDF). SIAM News. 36 (5).
  8. ^ Cocks, C. C. (20 November 1973). (PDF). www.gchq.gov.uk. Archived from the original (PDF) on 28 September 2018. Retrieved 2017-05-30.
  9. ^ Jim Sauerberg. "From Private to Public Key Ciphers in Three Easy Steps".
  10. ^ Margaret Cozzens and Steven J. Miller. "The Mathematics of Encryption: An Elementary Introduction". p. 180.
  11. ^ Alasdair McAndrew. "Introduction to Cryptography with Open-Source Software". p. 12.
  12. ^ Surender R. Chiluka. .
  13. ^ Neal Koblitz. "Cryptography As a Teaching Tool". Cryptologia, Vol. 21, No. 4 (1997).
  14. ^ . Archived from the original on June 21, 2007. Retrieved 2010-03-03.
  15. ^ a b Boneh, Dan (1999). "Twenty Years of attacks on the RSA Cryptosystem". Notices of the American Mathematical Society. 46 (2): 203–213.
  16. ^ Applied Cryptography, John Wiley & Sons, New York, 1996. Bruce Schneier, p. 467.
  17. ^ McKee, James; Pinch, Richard (1998). "Further Attacks on Server-Aided RSA Cryptosystems". CiteSeerX 10.1.1.33.1333.
  18. ^ A Course in Number Theory and Cryptography, Graduate Texts in Math. No. 114, Springer-Verlag, New York, 1987. Neal Koblitz, Second edition, 1994. p. 94.
  19. ^ Dukhovni, Viktor (July 31, 2015). "common factors in (p − 1) and (q − 1)". openssl-dev (Mailing list).
  20. ^ Dukhovni, Viktor (August 1, 2015). "common factors in (p − 1) and (q − 1)". openssl-dev (Mailing list).
  21. ^ Johnson, J.; Kaliski, B. (February 2003). Public-Key Cryptography Standards (PKCS) #1: RSA Cryptography Specifications Version 2.1. Network Working Group. doi:10.17487/RFC3447. RFC 3447. Retrieved 9 March 2016.
  22. ^ Håstad, Johan (1986). "On using RSA with Low Exponent in a Public Key Network". Advances in Cryptology – CRYPTO '85 Proceedings. Lecture Notes in Computer Science. Vol. 218. pp. 403–408. doi:10.1007/3-540-39799-X_29. ISBN 978-3-540-16463-0.
  23. ^ Coppersmith, Don (1997). "Small Solutions to Polynomial Equations, and Low Exponent RSA Vulnerabilities" (PDF). Journal of Cryptology. 10 (4): 233–260. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.298.4806. doi:10.1007/s001459900030. S2CID 15726802.
  24. ^ Goldwasser, Shafi; Micali, Silvio (1982-05-05). "Probabilistic encryption & how to play mental poker keeping secret all partial information". Proceedings of the fourteenth annual ACM symposium on Theory of computing - STOC '82. New York, NY, USA: Association for Computing Machinery. pp. 365–377. doi:10.1145/800070.802212. ISBN 978-0-89791-070-5. S2CID 10316867.
  25. ^ Coron, Jean-Sébastien; Joye, Marc; Naccache, David; Paillier, Pascal (2000). "New Attacks on PKCS#1 v1.5 Encryption". In Preneel, Bart (ed.). Advances in Cryptology — EUROCRYPT 2000. Lecture Notes in Computer Science. Vol. 1807. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer. pp. 369–381. doi:10.1007/3-540-45539-6_25. ISBN 978-3-540-45539-4.
  26. ^ "RSA Algorithm".
  27. ^ Machie, Edmond K. (29 March 2013). Network security traceback attack and react in the United States Department of Defense network. Trafford. p. 167. ISBN 978-1466985742.
  28. ^ Lenstra, Arjen; et al. (Group) (2000). "Factorization of a 512-bit RSA Modulus" (PDF). Eurocrypt.
  29. ^ Miller, Gary L. (1975). "Riemann's Hypothesis and Tests for Primality" (PDF). Proceedings of Seventh Annual ACM Symposium on Theory of Computing. pp. 234–239.
  30. ^ Zimmermann, Paul (2020-02-28). . Cado-nfs-discuss. Archived from the original on 2020-02-28. Retrieved 2020-07-12.
  31. ^ a b Kaliski, Burt (2003-05-06). . RSA Laboratories. Archived from the original on 2017-04-17. Retrieved 2017-11-24.
  32. ^ Barker, Elaine; Dang, Quynh (2015-01-22). "NIST Special Publication 800-57 Part 3 Revision 1: Recommendation for Key Management: Application-Specific Key Management Guidance" (PDF). National Institute of Standards and Technology. p. 12. doi:10.6028/NIST.SP.800-57pt3r1. Retrieved 2017-11-24.
  33. ^ Sandee, Michael (November 21, 2011). "RSA-512 certificates abused in-the-wild". Fox-IT International blog.
  34. ^ Wiener, Michael J. (May 1990). "Cryptanalysis of short RSA secret exponents" (PDF). IEEE Transactions on Information Theory. 36 (3): 553–558. doi:10.1109/18.54902. S2CID 7120331.
  35. ^ Nemec, Matus; Sys, Marek; Svenda, Petr; Klinec, Dusan; Matyas, Vashek (November 2017). "The Return of Coppersmith's Attack: Practical Factorization of Widely Used RSA Moduli" (PDF). Proceedings of the 2017 ACM SIGSAC Conference on Computer and Communications Security. CCS '17. doi:10.1145/3133956.3133969.
  36. ^ Markoff, John (February 14, 2012). "Flaw Found in an Online Encryption Method". The New York Times.
  37. ^ Lenstra, Arjen K.; Hughes, James P.; Augier, Maxime; Bos, Joppe W.; Kleinjung, Thorsten; Wachter, Christophe (2012). "Ron was wrong, Whit is right" (PDF).
  38. ^ Heninger, Nadia (February 15, 2012). "New research: There's no need to panic over factorable keys–just mind your Ps and Qs". Freedom to Tinker.
  39. ^ Brumley, David; Boneh, Dan (2003). "Remote timing attacks are practical" (PDF). Proceedings of the 12th Conference on USENIX Security Symposium. SSYM'03.
  40. ^ "'BERserk' Bug Uncovered In Mozilla NSS Crypto Library Impacts Firefox, Chrome". 25 September 2014. Retrieved 4 January 2022.
  41. ^ "RSA Signature Forgery in NSS". Mozilla.
  42. ^ Acıiçmez, Onur; Koç, Çetin Kaya; Seifert, Jean-Pierre (2007). "On the power of simple branch prediction analysis". Proceedings of the 2nd ACM Symposium on Information, Computer and Communications Security. ASIACCS '07. pp. 312–320. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.80.1438. doi:10.1145/1229285.1266999.
  43. ^ Pellegrini, Andrea; Bertacco, Valeria; Austin, Todd (2010). "Fault-Based Attack of RSA Authentication" (PDF).
  44. ^ Isom, Kyle. "Practical Cryptography With Go". Retrieved 4 January 2022.

Further reading edit

External links edit

  • The Original RSA Patent as filed with the U.S. Patent Office by Rivest; Ronald L. (Belmont, MA), Shamir; Adi (Cambridge, MA), Adleman; Leonard M. (Arlington, MA), December 14, 1977, U.S. patent 4,405,829.
  • PKCS #1: RSA Cryptography Standard (RSA Laboratories website)
  • Explanation of RSA using colored lamps on YouTube
  • Thorough walk through of RSA
  • Prime Number Hide-And-Seek: How the RSA Cipher Works
  • Onur Aciicmez, Cetin Kaya Koc, Jean-Pierre Seifert: On the Power of Simple Branch Prediction Analysis
  • Example of an RSA implementation with PKCS#1 padding (GPL source code) 2012-07-22 at the Wayback Machine
  • Kocher's article about timing attacks
  • An animated explanation of RSA with its mathematical background by CrypTool
  • Grime, James. . Numberphile. Brady Haran. Archived from the original on 2018-10-06. Retrieved 2013-04-13.
  • How RSA Key used for Encryption in real world

cryptosystem, this, article, about, cryptosystem, company, security, rivest, shamir, adleman, public, cryptosystem, oldest, widely, used, secure, data, transmission, initialism, comes, from, surnames, rivest, shamir, leonard, adleman, publicly, described, algo. This article is about a cryptosystem For the company see RSA Security RSA Rivest Shamir Adleman is a public key cryptosystem one of the oldest widely used for secure data transmission The initialism RSA comes from the surnames of Ron Rivest Adi Shamir and Leonard Adleman who publicly described the algorithm in 1977 An equivalent system was developed secretly in 1973 at Government Communications Headquarters GCHQ the British signals intelligence agency by the English mathematician Clifford Cocks That system was declassified in 1997 2 RSAGeneralDesignersRon Rivest 1 Adi Shamir and Leonard AdlemanFirst published1977CertificationPKCS 1 ANSI X9 31Cipher detailKey sizesvariable but 2 048 to 4 096 bit typicallyRounds1Best public cryptanalysisGeneral number field sieve for classical computers Shor s algorithm for quantum computers An 829 bit key has been broken In a public key cryptosystem the encryption key is public and distinct from the decryption key which is kept secret private An RSA user creates and publishes a public key based on two large prime numbers along with an auxiliary value The prime numbers are kept secret Messages can be encrypted by anyone via the public key but can only be decrypted by someone who knows the private key 1 The security of RSA relies on the practical difficulty of factoring the product of two large prime numbers the factoring problem Breaking RSA encryption is known as the RSA problem Whether it is as difficult as the factoring problem is an open question 3 There are no published methods to defeat the system if a large enough key is used RSA is a relatively slow algorithm Because of this it is not commonly used to directly encrypt user data More often RSA is used to transmit shared keys for symmetric key cryptography which are then used for bulk encryption decryption Contents 1 History 2 Patent 3 Operation 3 1 Key generation 3 2 Key distribution 3 3 Encryption 3 4 Decryption 3 5 Example 3 6 Signing messages 4 Proofs of correctness 4 1 Proof using Fermat s little theorem 4 1 1 Notes 4 2 Proof using Euler s theorem 5 Padding 5 1 Attacks against plain RSA 5 2 Padding schemes 6 Security and practical considerations 6 1 Using the Chinese remainder algorithm 6 2 Integer factorization and the RSA problem 6 3 Faulty key generation 6 4 Importance of strong random number generation 6 5 Timing attacks 6 6 Adaptive chosen ciphertext attacks 6 7 Side channel analysis attacks 6 8 Tricky implementation 7 Implementations 8 See also 9 Notes 10 References 11 Further reading 12 External linksHistory edit nbsp Adi Shamir co inventor of RSA the others are Ron Rivest and Leonard Adleman The idea of an asymmetric public private key cryptosystem is attributed to Whitfield Diffie and Martin Hellman who published this concept in 1976 They also introduced digital signatures and attempted to apply number theory Their formulation used a shared secret key created from exponentiation of some number modulo a prime number However they left open the problem of realizing a one way function possibly because the difficulty of factoring was not well studied at the time 4 Moreover like Diffie Hellman RSA is based on modular exponentiation Ron Rivest Adi Shamir and Leonard Adleman at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology made several attempts over the course of a year to create a function that was hard to invert Rivest and Shamir as computer scientists proposed many potential functions while Adleman as a mathematician was responsible for finding their weaknesses They tried many approaches including knapsack based and permutation polynomials For a time they thought what they wanted to achieve was impossible due to contradictory requirements 5 In April 1977 they spent Passover at the house of a student and drank a good deal of wine before returning to their homes at around midnight 6 Rivest unable to sleep lay on the couch with a math textbook and started thinking about their one way function He spent the rest of the night formalizing his idea and he had much of the paper ready by daybreak The algorithm is now known as RSA the initials of their surnames in same order as their paper 7 Clifford Cocks an English mathematician working for the British intelligence agency Government Communications Headquarters GCHQ described a similar system in an internal document in 1973 8 However given the relatively expensive computers needed to implement it at the time it was considered to be mostly a curiosity and as far as is publicly known was never deployed His ideas and concepts were not revealed until 1997 due to its top secret classification Kid RSA KRSA is a simplified insecure public key cipher published in 1997 designed for educational purposes Some people feel that learning Kid RSA gives insight into RSA and other public key ciphers analogous to simplified DES 9 10 11 12 13 Patent editA patent describing the RSA algorithm was granted to MIT on 20 September 1983 U S patent 4 405 829 Cryptographic communications system and method From DWPI s abstract of the patent The system includes a communications channel coupled to at least one terminal having an encoding device and to at least one terminal having a decoding device A message to be transferred is enciphered to ciphertext at the encoding terminal by encoding the message as a number M in a predetermined set That number is then raised to a first predetermined power associated with the intended receiver and finally computed The remainder or residue C is computed when the exponentiated number is divided by the product of two predetermined prime numbers associated with the intended receiver A detailed description of the algorithm was published in August 1977 in Scientific American s Mathematical Games column 7 This preceded the patent s filing date of December 1977 Consequently the patent had no legal standing outside the United States Had Cocks work been publicly known a patent in the United States would not have been legal either When the patent was issued terms of patent were 17 years The patent was about to expire on 21 September 2000 but RSA Security released the algorithm to the public domain on 6 September 2000 14 Operation editThe RSA algorithm involves four steps key generation key distribution encryption and decryption A basic principle behind RSA is the observation that it is practical to find three very large positive integers e d and n such that for all integers m 0 m lt n both m e d displaystyle m e d nbsp and m displaystyle m nbsp have the same remainder when divided by n displaystyle n nbsp they are congruent modulo n displaystyle n nbsp m e d m mod n displaystyle m e d equiv m pmod n nbsp However when given only e and n it is extremely difficult to find d The integers n and e comprise the public key d represents the private key and m represents the message The modular exponentiation to e and d corresponds to encryption and decryption respectively In addition because the two exponents can be swapped the private and public key can also be swapped allowing for message signing and verification using the same algorithm Key generation edit The keys for the RSA algorithm are generated in the following way Choose two large prime numbers p and q To make factoring harder p and q should be chosen at random be both large and have a large difference 1 For choosing them the standard method is to choose random integers and use a primality test until two primes are found p and q should be kept secret Compute n pq n is used as the modulus for both the public and private keys Its length usually expressed in bits is the key length n is released as part of the public key Compute l n where l is Carmichael s totient function Since n pq l n lcm l p l q and since p and q are prime l p f p p 1 and likewise l q q 1 Hence l n lcm p 1 q 1 The lcm may be calculated through the Euclidean algorithm since lcm a b ab gcd a b l n is kept secret Choose an integer e such that 1 lt e lt l n and gcd e l n 1 that is e and l n are coprime e having a short bit length and small Hamming weight results in more efficient encryption the most commonly chosen value for e is 216 1 65537 The smallest and fastest possible value for e is 3 but such a small value for e has been shown to be less secure in some settings 15 e is released as part of the public key Determine d as d e 1 mod l n that is d is the modular multiplicative inverse of e modulo l n This means solve for d the equation de 1 mod l n d can be computed efficiently by using the extended Euclidean algorithm since thanks to e and l n being coprime said equation is a form of Bezout s identity where d is one of the coefficients d is kept secret as the private key exponent The public key consists of the modulus n and the public or encryption exponent e The private key consists of the private or decryption exponent d which must be kept secret p q and l n must also be kept secret because they can be used to calculate d In fact they can all be discarded after d has been computed 16 In the original RSA paper 1 the Euler totient function f n p 1 q 1 is used instead of l n for calculating the private exponent d Since f n is always divisible by l n the algorithm works as well The possibility of using Euler totient function results also from Lagrange s theorem applied to the multiplicative group of integers modulo pq Thus any d satisfying d e 1 mod f n also satisfies d e 1 mod l n However computing d modulo f n will sometimes yield a result that is larger than necessary i e d gt l n Most of the implementations of RSA will accept exponents generated using either method if they use the private exponent d at all rather than using the optimized decryption method based on the Chinese remainder theorem described below but some standards such as FIPS 186 4 Section B 3 1 may require that d lt l n Any oversized private exponents not meeting this criterion may always be reduced modulo l n to obtain a smaller equivalent exponent Since any common factors of p 1 and q 1 are present in the factorisation of n 1 pq 1 p 1 q 1 p 1 q 1 17 self published source it is recommended that p 1 and q 1 have only very small common factors if any besides the necessary 2 1 18 19 failed verification 20 failed verification Note The authors of the original RSA paper carry out the key generation by choosing d and then computing e as the modular multiplicative inverse of d modulo f n whereas most current implementations of RSA such as those following PKCS 1 do the reverse choose e and compute d Since the chosen key can be small whereas the computed key normally is not the RSA paper s algorithm optimizes decryption compared to encryption while the modern algorithm optimizes encryption instead 1 21 Key distribution edit Suppose that Bob wants to send information to Alice If they decide to use RSA Bob must know Alice s public key to encrypt the message and Alice must use her private key to decrypt the message To enable Bob to send his encrypted messages Alice transmits her public key n e to Bob via a reliable but not necessarily secret route Alice s private key d is never distributed Encryption edit After Bob obtains Alice s public key he can send a message M to Alice To do it he first turns M strictly speaking the un padded plaintext into an integer m strictly speaking the padded plaintext such that 0 m lt n by using an agreed upon reversible protocol known as a padding scheme He then computes the ciphertext c using Alice s public key e corresponding toc m e mod n displaystyle c equiv m e pmod n nbsp This can be done reasonably quickly even for very large numbers using modular exponentiation Bob then transmits c to Alice Note that at least nine values of m will yield a ciphertext c equal to m a but this is very unlikely to occur in practice Decryption edit Alice can recover m from c by using her private key exponent d by computingc d m e d m mod n displaystyle c d equiv m e d equiv m pmod n nbsp Given m she can recover the original message M by reversing the padding scheme Example edit Here is an example of RSA encryption and decryption b Choose two distinct prime numbers such as p 61 displaystyle p 61 nbsp and q 53 displaystyle q 53 nbsp Compute n pq giving n 61 53 3233 displaystyle n 61 times 53 3233 nbsp Compute the Carmichael s totient function of the product as l n lcm p 1 q 1 giving l 3233 lcm 60 52 780 displaystyle lambda 3233 operatorname lcm 60 52 780 nbsp Choose any number 2 lt e lt 780 that is coprime to 780 Choosing a prime number for e leaves us only to check that e is not a divisor of 780 Let e 17 displaystyle e 17 nbsp Compute d the modular multiplicative inverse of e mod l n yieldingd 413 displaystyle d 413 nbsp as 1 17 413 mod 7 80 displaystyle 1 17 times 413 bmod 7 80 nbsp The public key is n 3233 e 17 For a padded plaintext message m the encryption function isc m m e mod n m 17 mod 3 233 displaystyle begin aligned c m amp m e bmod n amp m 17 bmod 3 233 end aligned nbsp The private key is n 3233 d 413 For an encrypted ciphertext c the decryption function ism c c d mod n c 413 mod 3 233 displaystyle begin aligned m c amp c d bmod n amp c 413 bmod 3 233 end aligned nbsp For instance in order to encrypt m 65 one calculatesc 65 17 mod 3 233 2790 displaystyle c 65 17 bmod 3 233 2790 nbsp To decrypt c 2790 one calculatesm 2790 413 mod 3 233 65 displaystyle m 2790 413 bmod 3 233 65 nbsp Both of these calculations can be computed efficiently using the square and multiply algorithm for modular exponentiation In real life situations the primes selected would be much larger in our example it would be trivial to factor n 3233 obtained from the freely available public key back to the primes p and q e also from the public key is then inverted to get d thus acquiring the private key Practical implementations use the Chinese remainder theorem to speed up the calculation using modulus of factors mod pq using mod p and mod q The values dp dq and qinv which are part of the private key are computed as follows d p d mod p 1 413 mod 61 1 53 d q d mod q 1 413 mod 53 1 49 q inv q 1 mod p 53 1 mod 6 1 38 q inv q mod p 38 53 mod 6 1 1 displaystyle begin aligned d p amp d bmod p 1 413 bmod 61 1 53 d q amp d bmod q 1 413 bmod 53 1 49 q text inv amp q 1 bmod p 53 1 bmod 6 1 38 amp Rightarrow q text inv times q bmod p 38 times 53 bmod 6 1 1 end aligned nbsp Here is how dp dq and qinv are used for efficient decryption encryption is efficient by choice of a suitable d and e pair m 1 c d p mod p 2790 53 mod 6 1 4 m 2 c d q mod q 2790 49 mod 5 3 12 h q inv m 1 m 2 mod p 38 8 mod 6 1 1 m m 2 h q 12 1 53 65 displaystyle begin aligned m 1 amp c d p bmod p 2790 53 bmod 6 1 4 m 2 amp c d q bmod q 2790 49 bmod 5 3 12 h amp q text inv times m 1 m 2 bmod p 38 times 8 bmod 6 1 1 m amp m 2 h times q 12 1 times 53 65 end aligned nbsp Signing messages edit Suppose Alice uses Bob s public key to send him an encrypted message In the message she can claim to be Alice but Bob has no way of verifying that the message was from Alice since anyone can use Bob s public key to send him encrypted messages In order to verify the origin of a message RSA can also be used to sign a message Suppose Alice wishes to send a signed message to Bob She can use her own private key to do so She produces a hash value of the message raises it to the power of d modulo n as she does when decrypting a message and attaches it as a signature to the message When Bob receives the signed message he uses the same hash algorithm in conjunction with Alice s public key He raises the signature to the power of e modulo n as he does when encrypting a message and compares the resulting hash value with the message s hash value If the two agree he knows that the author of the message was in possession of Alice s private key and that the message has not been tampered with since being sent This works because of exponentiation rules h hash m displaystyle h operatorname hash m nbsp h e d h e d h d e h d e h mod n displaystyle h e d h ed h de h d e equiv h pmod n nbsp Thus the keys may be swapped without loss of generality that is a private key of a key pair may be used either to Decrypt a message only intended for the recipient which may be encrypted by anyone having the public key asymmetric encrypted transport Encrypt a message which may be decrypted by anyone but which can only be encrypted by one person this provides a digital signature Proofs of correctness editProof using Fermat s little theorem edit The proof of the correctness of RSA is based on Fermat s little theorem stating that ap 1 1 mod p for any integer a and prime p not dividing a note 1 We want to show that m e d m mod p q displaystyle m e d equiv m pmod pq nbsp for every integer m when p and q are distinct prime numbers and e and d are positive integers satisfying ed 1 mod l pq Since l pq lcm p 1 q 1 is by construction divisible by both p 1 and q 1 we can writee d 1 h p 1 k q 1 displaystyle ed 1 h p 1 k q 1 nbsp for some nonnegative integers h and k note 2 To check whether two numbers such as med and m are congruent mod pq it suffices and in fact is equivalent to check that they are congruent mod p and mod q separately note 3 To show med m mod p we consider two cases If m 0 mod p m is a multiple of p Thus med is a multiple of p So med 0 m mod p If m displaystyle not equiv nbsp 0 mod p m e d m e d 1 m m h p 1 m m p 1 h m 1 h m m mod p displaystyle m ed m ed 1 m m h p 1 m m p 1 h m equiv 1 h m equiv m pmod p nbsp where we used Fermat s little theorem to replace mp 1 mod p with 1 The verification that med m mod q proceeds in a completely analogous way If m 0 mod q med is a multiple of q So med 0 m mod q If m displaystyle not equiv nbsp 0 mod q m e d m e d 1 m m k q 1 m m q 1 k m 1 k m m mod q displaystyle m ed m ed 1 m m k q 1 m m q 1 k m equiv 1 k m equiv m pmod q nbsp This completes the proof that for any integer m and integers e d such that ed 1 mod l pq m e d m mod p q displaystyle m e d equiv m pmod pq nbsp Notes edit We cannot trivially break RSA by applying the theorem mod pq because pq is not prime In particular the statement above holds for any e and d that satisfy ed 1 mod p 1 q 1 since p 1 q 1 is divisible by l pq and thus trivially also by p 1 and q 1 However in modern implementations of RSA it is common to use a reduced private exponent d that only satisfies the weaker but sufficient condition ed 1 mod l pq This is part of the Chinese remainder theorem although it is not the significant part of that theorem Proof using Euler s theorem edit Although the original paper of Rivest Shamir and Adleman used Fermat s little theorem to explain why RSA works it is common to find proofs that rely instead on Euler s theorem We want to show that med m mod n where n pq is a product of two different prime numbers and e and d are positive integers satisfying ed 1 mod f n Since e and d are positive we can write ed 1 hf n for some non negative integer h Assuming that m is relatively prime to n we havem e d m 1 h f n m m f n h m 1 h m mod n displaystyle m ed m 1 h varphi n m m varphi n h equiv m 1 h equiv m pmod n nbsp where the second last congruence follows from Euler s theorem More generally for any e and d satisfying ed 1 mod l n the same conclusion follows from Carmichael s generalization of Euler s theorem which states that ml n 1 mod n for all m relatively prime to n When m is not relatively prime to n the argument just given is invalid This is highly improbable only a proportion of 1 p 1 q 1 pq numbers have this property but even in this case the desired congruence is still true Either m 0 mod p or m 0 mod q and these cases can be treated using the previous proof Padding editAttacks against plain RSA edit There are a number of attacks against plain RSA as described below When encrypting with low encryption exponents e g e 3 and small values of the m i e m lt n1 e the result of me is strictly less than the modulus n In this case ciphertexts can be decrypted easily by taking the e th root of the ciphertext over the integers If the same clear text message is sent to e or more recipients in an encrypted way and the receivers share the same exponent e but different p q and therefore n then it is easy to decrypt the original clear text message via the Chinese remainder theorem Johan Hastad noticed that this attack is possible even if the clear texts are not equal but the attacker knows a linear relation between them 22 This attack was later improved by Don Coppersmith see Coppersmith s attack 23 Because RSA encryption is a deterministic encryption algorithm i e has no random component an attacker can successfully launch a chosen plaintext attack against the cryptosystem by encrypting likely plaintexts under the public key and test whether they are equal to the ciphertext A cryptosystem is called semantically secure if an attacker cannot distinguish two encryptions from each other even if the attacker knows or has chosen the corresponding plaintexts RSA without padding is not semantically secure 24 RSA has the property that the product of two ciphertexts is equal to the encryption of the product of the respective plaintexts That is m1em2e m1m2 e mod n Because of this multiplicative property a chosen ciphertext attack is possible E g an attacker who wants to know the decryption of a ciphertext c me mod n may ask the holder of the private key d to decrypt an unsuspicious looking ciphertext c cre mod n for some value r chosen by the attacker Because of the multiplicative property c is the encryption of mr mod n Hence if the attacker is successful with the attack they will learn mr mod n from which they can derive the message m by multiplying mr with the modular inverse of r modulo n citation needed Given the private exponent d one can efficiently factor the modulus n pq And given factorization of the modulus n pq one can obtain any private key d n generated against a public key e n 15 Padding schemes edit To avoid these problems practical RSA implementations typically embed some form of structured randomized padding into the value m before encrypting it This padding ensures that m does not fall into the range of insecure plaintexts and that a given message once padded will encrypt to one of a large number of different possible ciphertexts Standards such as PKCS 1 have been carefully designed to securely pad messages prior to RSA encryption Because these schemes pad the plaintext m with some number of additional bits the size of the un padded message M must be somewhat smaller RSA padding schemes must be carefully designed so as to prevent sophisticated attacks that may be facilitated by a predictable message structure Early versions of the PKCS 1 standard up to version 1 5 used a construction that appears to make RSA semantically secure However at Crypto 1998 Bleichenbacher showed that this version is vulnerable to a practical adaptive chosen ciphertext attack Furthermore at Eurocrypt 2000 Coron et al 25 showed that for some types of messages this padding does not provide a high enough level of security Later versions of the standard include Optimal Asymmetric Encryption Padding OAEP which prevents these attacks As such OAEP should be used in any new application and PKCS 1 v1 5 padding should be replaced wherever possible The PKCS 1 standard also incorporates processing schemes designed to provide additional security for RSA signatures e g the Probabilistic Signature Scheme for RSA RSA PSS Secure padding schemes such as RSA PSS are as essential for the security of message signing as they are for message encryption Two USA patents on PSS were granted U S patent 6 266 771 and U S patent 7 036 014 however these patents expired on 24 July 2009 and 25 April 2010 respectively Use of PSS no longer seems to be encumbered by patents original research Note that using different RSA key pairs for encryption and signing is potentially more secure 26 Security and practical considerations editUsing the Chinese remainder algorithm edit For efficiency many popular crypto libraries such as OpenSSL Java and NET use for decryption and signing the following optimization based on the Chinese remainder theorem citation needed The following values are precomputed and stored as part of the private key p displaystyle p nbsp and q displaystyle q nbsp the primes from the key generation d P d mod p 1 displaystyle d P d pmod p 1 nbsp d Q d mod q 1 displaystyle d Q d pmod q 1 nbsp q inv q 1 mod p displaystyle q text inv q 1 pmod p nbsp These values allow the recipient to compute the exponentiation m cd mod pq more efficiently as follows m 1 c d P mod p displaystyle m 1 c d P pmod p nbsp m 2 c d Q mod q displaystyle m 2 c d Q pmod q nbsp h q inv m 1 m 2 mod p displaystyle h q text inv m 1 m 2 pmod p nbsp c m m 2 h q displaystyle m m 2 hq nbsp This is more efficient than computing exponentiation by squaring even though two modular exponentiations have to be computed The reason is that these two modular exponentiations both use a smaller exponent and a smaller modulus Integer factorization and the RSA problem edit See also RSA Factoring Challenge Integer factorization records and Shor s algorithm The security of the RSA cryptosystem is based on two mathematical problems the problem of factoring large numbers and the RSA problem Full decryption of an RSA ciphertext is thought to be infeasible on the assumption that both of these problems are hard i e no efficient algorithm exists for solving them Providing security against partial decryption may require the addition of a secure padding scheme 27 The RSA problem is defined as the task of taking e th roots modulo a composite n recovering a value m such that c me mod n where n e is an RSA public key and c is an RSA ciphertext Currently the most promising approach to solving the RSA problem is to factor the modulus n With the ability to recover prime factors an attacker can compute the secret exponent d from a public key n e then decrypt c using the standard procedure To accomplish this an attacker factors n into p and q and computes lcm p 1 q 1 that allows the determination of d from e No polynomial time method for factoring large integers on a classical computer has yet been found but it has not been proven that none exists see integer factorization for a discussion of this problem Multiple polynomial quadratic sieve MPQS can be used to factor the public modulus n The first RSA 512 factorization in 1999 used hundreds of computers and required the equivalent of 8 400 MIPS years over an elapsed time of about seven months 28 By 2009 Benjamin Moody could factor an 512 bit RSA key in 73 days using only public software GGNFS and his desktop computer a dual core Athlon64 with a 1 900 MHz CPU Just less than 5 gigabytes of disk storage was required and about 2 5 gigabytes of RAM for the sieving process Rivest Shamir and Adleman noted 1 that Miller has shown that assuming the truth of the extended Riemann hypothesis finding d from n and e is as hard as factoring n into p and q up to a polynomial time difference 29 However Rivest Shamir and Adleman noted in section IX D of their paper that they had not found a proof that inverting RSA is as hard as factoring As of 2020 update the largest publicly known factored RSA number had 829 bits 250 decimal digits RSA 250 30 Its factorization by a state of the art distributed implementation took about 2 700 CPU years In practice RSA keys are typically 1024 to 4096 bits long In 2003 RSA Security estimated that 1024 bit keys were likely to become crackable by 2010 31 As of 2020 it is not known whether such keys can be cracked but minimum recommendations have moved to at least 2048 bits 32 It is generally presumed that RSA is secure if n is sufficiently large outside of quantum computing If n is 300 bits or shorter it can be factored in a few hours in a personal computer using software already freely available Keys of 512 bits have been shown to be practically breakable in 1999 when RSA 155 was factored by using several hundred computers and these are now factored in a few weeks using common hardware Exploits using 512 bit code signing certificates that may have been factored were reported in 2011 33 A theoretical hardware device named TWIRL described by Shamir and Tromer in 2003 called into question the security of 1024 bit keys 31 In 1994 Peter Shor showed that a quantum computer if one could ever be practically created for the purpose would be able to factor in polynomial time breaking RSA see Shor s algorithm Faulty key generation edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources RSA cryptosystem news newspapers books scholar JSTOR October 2017 Learn how and when to remove this message See also Coppersmith s attack and Wiener s attack Finding the large primes p and q is usually done by testing random numbers of the correct size with probabilistic primality tests that quickly eliminate virtually all of the nonprimes The numbers p and q should not be too close lest the Fermat factorization for n be successful If p q is less than 2n1 4 n p q which even for small 1024 bit values of n is 3 1077 solving for p and q is trivial Furthermore if either p 1 or q 1 has only small prime factors n can be factored quickly by Pollard s p 1 algorithm and hence such values of p or q should be discarded It is important that the private exponent d be large enough Michael J Wiener showed that if p is between q and 2q which is quite typical and d lt n1 4 3 then d can be computed efficiently from n and e 34 There is no known attack against small public exponents such as e 3 provided that the proper padding is used Coppersmith s attack has many applications in attacking RSA specifically if the public exponent e is small and if the encrypted message is short and not padded 65537 is a commonly used value for e this value can be regarded as a compromise between avoiding potential small exponent attacks and still allowing efficient encryptions or signature verification The NIST Special Publication on Computer Security SP 800 78 Rev 1 of August 2007 does not allow public exponents e smaller than 65537 but does not state a reason for this restriction In October 2017 a team of researchers from Masaryk University announced the ROCA vulnerability which affects RSA keys generated by an algorithm embodied in a library from Infineon known as RSALib A large number of smart cards and trusted platform modules TPM were shown to be affected Vulnerable RSA keys are easily identified using a test program the team released 35 Importance of strong random number generation edit A cryptographically strong random number generator which has been properly seeded with adequate entropy must be used to generate the primes p and q An analysis comparing millions of public keys gathered from the Internet was carried out in early 2012 by Arjen K Lenstra James P Hughes Maxime Augier Joppe W Bos Thorsten Kleinjung and Christophe Wachter They were able to factor 0 2 of the keys using only Euclid s algorithm 36 37 self published source They exploited a weakness unique to cryptosystems based on integer factorization If n pq is one public key and n p q is another then if by chance p p but q is not equal to q then a simple computation of gcd n n p factors both n and n totally compromising both keys Lenstra et al note that this problem can be minimized by using a strong random seed of bit length twice the intended security level or by employing a deterministic function to choose q given p instead of choosing p and q independently Nadia Heninger was part of a group that did a similar experiment They used an idea of Daniel J Bernstein to compute the GCD of each RSA key n against the product of all the other keys n they had found a 729 million digit number instead of computing each gcd n n separately thereby achieving a very significant speedup since after one large division the GCD problem is of normal size Heninger says in her blog that the bad keys occurred almost entirely in embedded applications including firewalls routers VPN devices remote server administration devices printers projectors and VOIP phones from more than 30 manufacturers Heninger explains that the one shared prime problem uncovered by the two groups results from situations where the pseudorandom number generator is poorly seeded initially and then is reseeded between the generation of the first and second primes Using seeds of sufficiently high entropy obtained from key stroke timings or electronic diode noise or atmospheric noise from a radio receiver tuned between stations should solve the problem 38 Strong random number generation is important throughout every phase of public key cryptography For instance if a weak generator is used for the symmetric keys that are being distributed by RSA then an eavesdropper could bypass RSA and guess the symmetric keys directly Timing attacks edit Kocher described a new attack on RSA in 1995 if the attacker Eve knows Alice s hardware in sufficient detail and is able to measure the decryption times for several known ciphertexts Eve can deduce the decryption key d quickly This attack can also be applied against the RSA signature scheme In 2003 Boneh and Brumley demonstrated a more practical attack capable of recovering RSA factorizations over a network connection e g from a Secure Sockets Layer SSL enabled webserver 39 This attack takes advantage of information leaked by the Chinese remainder theorem optimization used by many RSA implementations One way to thwart these attacks is to ensure that the decryption operation takes a constant amount of time for every ciphertext However this approach can significantly reduce performance Instead most RSA implementations use an alternate technique known as cryptographic blinding RSA blinding makes use of the multiplicative property of RSA Instead of computing cd mod n Alice first chooses a secret random value r and computes rec d mod n The result of this computation after applying Euler s theorem is rcd mod n and so the effect of r can be removed by multiplying by its inverse A new value of r is chosen for each ciphertext With blinding applied the decryption time is no longer correlated to the value of the input ciphertext and so the timing attack fails Adaptive chosen ciphertext attacks edit In 1998 Daniel Bleichenbacher described the first practical adaptive chosen ciphertext attack against RSA encrypted messages using the PKCS 1 v1 padding scheme a padding scheme randomizes and adds structure to an RSA encrypted message so it is possible to determine whether a decrypted message is valid Due to flaws with the PKCS 1 scheme Bleichenbacher was able to mount a practical attack against RSA implementations of the Secure Sockets Layer protocol and to recover session keys As a result of this work cryptographers now recommend the use of provably secure padding schemes such as Optimal Asymmetric Encryption Padding and RSA Laboratories has released new versions of PKCS 1 that are not vulnerable to these attacks A variant of this attack dubbed BERserk came back in 2014 40 41 It impacted the Mozilla NSS Crypto Library which was used notably by Firefox and Chrome Side channel analysis attacks edit A side channel attack using branch prediction analysis BPA has been described Many processors use a branch predictor to determine whether a conditional branch in the instruction flow of a program is likely to be taken or not Often these processors also implement simultaneous multithreading SMT Branch prediction analysis attacks use a spy process to discover statistically the private key when processed with these processors Simple Branch Prediction Analysis SBPA claims to improve BPA in a non statistical way In their paper On the Power of Simple Branch Prediction Analysis 42 the authors of SBPA Onur Aciicmez and Cetin Kaya Koc claim to have discovered 508 out of 512 bits of an RSA key in 10 iterations A power fault attack on RSA implementations was described in 2010 43 self published source The author recovered the key by varying the CPU power voltage outside limits this caused multiple power faults on the server Tricky implementation edit There are many details to keep in mind in order to implement RSA securely strong PRNG acceptable public exponent etc This makes the implementation challenging to the point the book Practical Cryptography With Go suggests avoiding RSA if possible 44 Implementations editSome cryptography libraries that provide support for RSA include Botan Bouncy Castle cryptlib Crypto Libgcrypt Nettle OpenSSL wolfCrypt GnuTLS mbed TLS LibreSSLSee also edit nbsp Mathematics portal Acoustic cryptanalysis Computational complexity theory Diffie Hellman key exchange Digital Signature Algorithm Elliptic curve cryptography Key exchange Key management Key size Public key cryptography Rabin cryptosystem Trapdoor functionNotes edit Namely the values of m which are equal to 1 0 or 1 modulo p while also equal to 1 0 or 1 modulo q There will be more values of m having c m if p 1 or q 1 has other divisors in common with e 1 besides 2 because this gives more values of m such that m e 1 mod p 1 displaystyle m e 1 bmod p 1 nbsp or m e 1 mod q 1 displaystyle m e 1 bmod q 1 nbsp respectively The parameters used here are artificially small but one can also OpenSSL can also be used to generate and examine a real keypair If m 1 lt m 2 displaystyle m 1 lt m 2 nbsp then some clarification needed libraries compute h as q inv m 1 q p p m 2 mod p displaystyle q text inv left left m 1 left lceil frac q p right rceil p right m 2 right pmod p nbsp References edit a b c d e f g Rivest R Shamir A Adleman L February 1978 A Method for Obtaining Digital Signatures and Public Key Cryptosystems PDF Communications of the ACM 21 2 120 126 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 607 2677 doi 10 1145 359340 359342 S2CID 2873616 Archived from the original PDF on 2023 01 27 Smart Nigel February 19 2008 Dr Clifford Cocks CB Bristol University Retrieved August 14 2011 Castelvecchi Davide 2020 10 30 Quantum computing pioneer warns of complacency over Internet security Nature 587 7833 189 Bibcode 2020Natur 587 189C doi 10 1038 d41586 020 03068 9 PMID 33139910 S2CID 226243008 2020 interview of Peter Shor Diffie W Hellman M E November 1976 New directions in cryptography IEEE Transactions on Information Theory 22 6 644 654 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 37 9720 doi 10 1109 TIT 1976 1055638 ISSN 0018 9448 Rivest Ronald The Early Days of RSA History and Lessons PDF Calderbank Michael 2007 08 20 The RSA Cryptosystem History Algorithm Primes PDF a b Robinson Sara June 2003 Still Guarding Secrets after Years of Attacks RSA Earns Accolades for its Founders PDF SIAM News 36 5 Cocks C C 20 November 1973 A Note on Non Secret Encryption PDF www gchq gov uk Archived from the original PDF on 28 September 2018 Retrieved 2017 05 30 Jim Sauerberg From Private to Public Key Ciphers in Three Easy Steps Margaret Cozzens and Steven J Miller The Mathematics of Encryption An Elementary Introduction p 180 Alasdair McAndrew Introduction to Cryptography with Open Source Software p 12 Surender R Chiluka Public key Cryptography Neal Koblitz Cryptography As a Teaching Tool Cryptologia Vol 21 No 4 1997 RSA Security Releases RSA Encryption Algorithm into Public Domain Archived from the original on June 21 2007 Retrieved 2010 03 03 a b Boneh Dan 1999 Twenty Years of attacks on the RSA Cryptosystem Notices of the American Mathematical Society 46 2 203 213 Applied Cryptography John Wiley amp Sons New York 1996 Bruce Schneier p 467 McKee James Pinch Richard 1998 Further Attacks on Server Aided RSA Cryptosystems CiteSeerX 10 1 1 33 1333 A Course in Number Theory and Cryptography Graduate Texts in Math No 114 Springer Verlag New York 1987 Neal Koblitz Second edition 1994 p 94 Dukhovni Viktor July 31 2015 common factors in p 1 and q 1 openssl dev Mailing list Dukhovni Viktor August 1 2015 common factors in p 1 and q 1 openssl dev Mailing list Johnson J Kaliski B February 2003 Public Key Cryptography Standards PKCS 1 RSA Cryptography Specifications Version 2 1 Network Working Group doi 10 17487 RFC3447 RFC 3447 Retrieved 9 March 2016 Hastad Johan 1986 On using RSA with Low Exponent in a Public Key Network Advances in Cryptology CRYPTO 85 Proceedings Lecture Notes in Computer Science Vol 218 pp 403 408 doi 10 1007 3 540 39799 X 29 ISBN 978 3 540 16463 0 Coppersmith Don 1997 Small Solutions to Polynomial Equations and Low Exponent RSA Vulnerabilities PDF Journal of Cryptology 10 4 233 260 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 298 4806 doi 10 1007 s001459900030 S2CID 15726802 Goldwasser Shafi Micali Silvio 1982 05 05 Probabilistic encryption amp how to play mental poker keeping secret all partial information Proceedings of the fourteenth annual ACM symposium on Theory of computing STOC 82 New York NY USA Association for Computing Machinery pp 365 377 doi 10 1145 800070 802212 ISBN 978 0 89791 070 5 S2CID 10316867 Coron Jean Sebastien Joye Marc Naccache David Paillier Pascal 2000 New Attacks on PKCS 1 v1 5 Encryption In Preneel Bart ed Advances in Cryptology EUROCRYPT 2000 Lecture Notes in Computer Science Vol 1807 Berlin Heidelberg Springer pp 369 381 doi 10 1007 3 540 45539 6 25 ISBN 978 3 540 45539 4 RSA Algorithm Machie Edmond K 29 March 2013 Network security traceback attack and react in the United States Department of Defense network Trafford p 167 ISBN 978 1466985742 Lenstra Arjen et al Group 2000 Factorization of a 512 bit RSA Modulus PDF Eurocrypt Miller Gary L 1975 Riemann s Hypothesis and Tests for Primality PDF Proceedings of Seventh Annual ACM Symposium on Theory of Computing pp 234 239 Zimmermann Paul 2020 02 28 Factorization of RSA 250 Cado nfs discuss Archived from the original on 2020 02 28 Retrieved 2020 07 12 a b Kaliski Burt 2003 05 06 TWIRL and RSA Key Size RSA Laboratories Archived from the original on 2017 04 17 Retrieved 2017 11 24 Barker Elaine Dang Quynh 2015 01 22 NIST Special Publication 800 57 Part 3 Revision 1 Recommendation for Key Management Application Specific Key Management Guidance PDF National Institute of Standards and Technology p 12 doi 10 6028 NIST SP 800 57pt3r1 Retrieved 2017 11 24 Sandee Michael November 21 2011 RSA 512 certificates abused in the wild Fox IT International blog Wiener Michael J May 1990 Cryptanalysis of short RSA secret exponents PDF IEEE Transactions on Information Theory 36 3 553 558 doi 10 1109 18 54902 S2CID 7120331 Nemec Matus Sys Marek Svenda Petr Klinec Dusan Matyas Vashek November 2017 The Return of Coppersmith s Attack Practical Factorization of Widely Used RSA Moduli PDF Proceedings of the 2017 ACM SIGSAC Conference on Computer and Communications Security CCS 17 doi 10 1145 3133956 3133969 Markoff John February 14 2012 Flaw Found in an Online Encryption Method The New York Times Lenstra Arjen K Hughes James P Augier Maxime Bos Joppe W Kleinjung Thorsten Wachter Christophe 2012 Ron was wrong Whit is right PDF Heninger Nadia February 15 2012 New research There s no need to panic over factorable keys just mind your Ps and Qs Freedom to Tinker Brumley David Boneh Dan 2003 Remote timing attacks are practical PDF Proceedings of the 12th Conference on USENIX Security Symposium SSYM 03 BERserk Bug Uncovered In Mozilla NSS Crypto Library Impacts Firefox Chrome 25 September 2014 Retrieved 4 January 2022 RSA Signature Forgery in NSS Mozilla Aciicmez Onur Koc Cetin Kaya Seifert Jean Pierre 2007 On the power of simple branch prediction analysis Proceedings of the 2nd ACM Symposium on Information Computer and Communications Security ASIACCS 07 pp 312 320 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 80 1438 doi 10 1145 1229285 1266999 Pellegrini Andrea Bertacco Valeria Austin Todd 2010 Fault Based Attack of RSA Authentication PDF Isom Kyle Practical Cryptography With Go Retrieved 4 January 2022 Further reading editMenezes Alfred van Oorschot Paul C Vanstone Scott A October 1996 Handbook of Applied Cryptography CRC Press ISBN 978 0 8493 8523 0 Cormen Thomas H Leiserson Charles E Rivest Ronald L Stein Clifford 2001 Introduction to Algorithms 2nd ed MIT Press and McGraw Hill pp 881 887 ISBN 978 0 262 03293 3 External links editThe Original RSA Patent as filed with the U S Patent Office by Rivest Ronald L Belmont MA Shamir Adi Cambridge MA Adleman Leonard M Arlington MA December 14 1977 U S patent 4 405 829 PKCS 1 RSA Cryptography Standard RSA Laboratories website The PKCS 1 standard provides recommendations for the implementation of public key cryptography based on the RSA algorithm covering the following aspects cryptographic primitives encryption schemes signature schemes with appendix ASN 1 syntax for representing keys and for identifying the schemes Explanation of RSA using colored lamps on YouTube Thorough walk through of RSA Prime Number Hide And Seek How the RSA Cipher Works Onur Aciicmez Cetin Kaya Koc Jean Pierre Seifert On the Power of Simple Branch Prediction Analysis Example of an RSA implementation with PKCS 1 padding GPL source code Archived 2012 07 22 at the Wayback Machine Kocher s article about timing attacks An animated explanation of RSA with its mathematical background by CrypTool Grime James RSA Encryption Numberphile Brady Haran Archived from the original on 2018 10 06 Retrieved 2013 04 13 How RSA Key used for Encryption in real world Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title RSA cryptosystem amp oldid 1221958777, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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