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CRYPTOGRAPHY: STATE OF THE SCIENCE ASIACRYPT 2003 invited talk

CRYPTOGRAPHY: STATE OF THE SCIENCE ASIACRYPT 2003 invited talk. Adi Shamir Computer Science Dept The Weizmann Institute Israel. Cryptography: major trends. Cryptography: major trends. From secret to public. Cryptography is central. Com&info theory. Comp science. crypto. Math& stat.

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CRYPTOGRAPHY: STATE OF THE SCIENCE ASIACRYPT 2003 invited talk

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  1. CRYPTOGRAPHY:STATE OF THE SCIENCEASIACRYPT 2003 invited talk Adi Shamir Computer Science Dept The Weizmann Institute Israel

  2. Cryptography: major trends

  3. Cryptography: major trends • From secret to public

  4. Cryptography is central Com&info theory Comp science crypto Math& stat Computers and chips Hi-tech industry Policy issues

  5. Cryptography is fun • Gets lots of media attention • Attracts hackers • Is full of delightful ideas • Serves as an excellent educational tool

  6. Cryptography: major trends • From secret to public • From national to international

  7. The geography of cryptography • Publicly started in the US

  8. The geography of cryptography • Publicly started in the US • Followed by Europe

  9. The geography of cryptography • Publicly started in the US • Followed by Europe • Is rapidly expanding in Asia

  10. Cryptography: major trends • From secret to public • From national to international • From art to science

  11. Cryptography as a scientific discipline Is thriving as a scientific area of research: • Taught at most major universities • Attracts many excellent students • Discussed at many conferences (>25 in the next 6 months!) • Published in hundreds of papers (e.g., EPRINT) • Major conferences have >500 attendees (Major trade shows have >10,000 attendees) Received the ultimate seal of approval from the general CS community (the Turing award…)

  12. Should we rename the field? • Cryptography means “secret writing” • The official naming of the field: Cryptology = Cryptography + cryptanalysis

  13. Should we rename the field? • Cryptography means “secret writing” • The official naming of the field: Cryptology = Cryptography + cryptanalysis • These terms have problematic conotations • Many research subfields do not deal with the encryption or decryption of secret information

  14. Should we rename the field? • Cryptography means “secret writing” • The official naming of the field: Cryptology = Cryptography + cryptanalysis • These terms have problematic conotations • Many research subfields do not deal with the encryption or decryption of secret information • I propose to call the broader field Adversity Theory = cryptology + other areas

  15. Cryptography: major trends • From secret to public • From national to international • From art to science • From math to physics

  16. Related scientific fields: • OLD COMBINATIONS: • Probability and statistics • Algebra • Number Theory

  17. Related scientific fields: • OLD COMBINATIONS: • Probability and statistics • Algebra • Number Theory • NEW COMBINATIONS: • Signal processing (in steg, fingerprinting) • Electronics (in side channel attacks) • Physics (in quantum computers and crypto)

  18. Cryptography: major trends • From secret to public • From national to international • From art to science • From math to physics • From theory to practice

  19. Cryptography unites Theory & practice • Practical theory: - using abstract math tools in cryptanalysis - proving the security of real protocols -developing new cryptographic schemes • Theoretical practice: - developing new notions of security, complexity, logics, and randomness - turning cryptography from art to science

  20. New challenges in cryptography • Payment systems • Cellular telephony • Wi-Fi networks • RFID tags • DRM systems

  21. Cryptography: major trends • From secret to public • From national to international • From art to science • From math to physics • From theory to practice • From political to legal issues

  22. Cryptographic misconceptions • By policy makers: crypto is dangerous, but: - weak crypto is not a solution - controls can’t stop the inevitable • By researchers: A provably secure system is secure, but: - proven false by indirect attacks - can be based on false assumptions - requires careful choice of parameters • By implementers: Cryptography solves everything, but: - only basic ideas are successfully deployed - only simple attacks are avoided - bad crypto can provide a false sense of security

  23. The three laws of security: • Absolutely secure systems do not exist • To halve your vulnerability, you have to double your expenditure • Cryptography is typically bypassed, not penetrated

  24. Cryptography: A rapidly moving field

  25. Cryptography: A rapidly moving field • 75-80: Public key cryptography, basic schemes

  26. Cryptography: A rapidly moving field • 75-80: Public key cryptography, basic schemes • 80-85: Theoretical foundations, new protocols

  27. Cryptography: A rapidly moving field • 75-80: Public key cryptography, basic schemes • 80-85: Theoretical foundations, new protocols • 85-90: Zero Knowledge, secure computation

  28. Cryptography: A rapidly moving field • 75-80: Public key cryptography, basic schemes • 80-85: Theoretical foundations, new protocols • 85-90: Zero Knowledge, secure computation • 90-95: Diff&lin cryptanalysis, quantum comp

  29. Cryptography: A rapidly moving field • 75-80: Public key cryptography, basic schemes • 80-85: Theoretical foundations, new protocols • 85-90: Zero Knowledge, secure computation • 90-95: Diff&lin cryptanalysis, quantum comp • 95-00: Side channel attacks, elliptic curves

  30. Cryptography: A rapidly moving field • 75-80: Public key cryptography, basic schemes • 80-85: Theoretical foundations, new protocols • 85-90: Zero Knowledge, secure computation • 90-95: Diff&lin cryptanalysis, quantum comp • 95-00: Side channel attacks, elliptic curves • 00-05: ???

  31. The basic schemes: Major trends

  32. The basic schemes: Major trends • Secret key cryptography: DES out, AES in

  33. The basic schemes: Major trends • Secret key cryptography: DES out, AES in • Public key cryptography: RSA steady, EC improving, faster schemes increasingly risky and less appealing. Should not be used for long term security.

  34. The basic schemes: Major trends • Secret key cryptography: DES out, AES in • Public key cryptography: RSA steady, EC improving, faster schemes increasingly risky and less appealing. Should not be used for long term security. • Quantum schemes: the wild card

  35. Some of my controvertial positions:

  36. Some of my controvertial positions: When applied in practice:

  37. Some of my controvertial positions: When applied in practice: • Security should not be overdone

  38. Some of my controvertial positions: When applied in practice: • Security should not be overdone • Security should not be overexposed

  39. Some of my controvertial positions: When applied in practice: • Security should not be overdone • Security should not be overexposed • Security should not be underregulated

  40. Some of my controvertial positions: When applied in practice: • Security should not be overdone • Security should not be overexposed • Security should not be underregulated • Security should be guided by an ethical code

  41. Some of my controvertial positions: When applied in practice: • Security should not be overdone • Security should not be overexposed • Security should not be underregulated • Security should be guided by an ethical code • Security should be complemented by legal measures

  42. Cryptographic status report In each of the six major subareas I’ll summarize: • The major achievements so far • Strong and weak points, major challenges • A 1-10 grade

  43. Theory of cryptography • Well defined primitives & definitions of security • Well understood relationships between notions • Deep connections with randomness & complexity • Beautiful mathematical results • Highly developed theory • Excellent design tools • Challenge: reduce dependence on assumptions • Final grade: 9

  44. Public key encryption and signature schemes • RSA, DH, DSA • Based on modular arithmetic, EC, other ideas(?) • Vigorous cryptanalytic research • Excellent theory • Expanding applications • Challenges: Break a major scheme, make a new one • Final grade: 8

  45. Secret key cryptography – block ciphers • DES, AES, modes of operation • Differential and linear cryptanalysis • Good cryptanalytic tools • Reasonable choice of primitives • Many good schemes • Challenge: Connect strong theory with strong practice • Final grade: 7

  46. Secret key cryptography – stream ciphers • Linear feedback shift registers • Fast correlation attacks, algebraic attacks • Limited cryptanalytic tools • Narrow choice of primitives • Many insecure schemes • Challenge: Improve weak theory and weak practice • Final grade: 4

  47. Theoretical Cryptographic protocols • Zero knowledge interactive proofs • Secure multiparty computations • Almost anything is doable and provable • Many gems • Theoretical protocols are too slow • Challenge: Make the strong theory practical • Final grade: 8

  48. Practical Cryptographic protocols • Many ad-hoc ideas • Proofs in the random oracle model (ROM) • Rapidly expanding body of results • Lots of buggy protocols • Reasonable design primitives • Improving theory • Challenges: incorporate side channel attacks, ROM • Final grade: 5

  49. Cryptographic predictions: • AES will remain secure for the forseeable future • Some PK schemes and key sizes will be successfully attacked in the next few years • Crypto will be invisibly everywhere • Vulnerabilities will be visibly everywhere • Crypto research will remain vigorous, but only its simplest ideas will become practically useful • Non-crypto security will remain a mess

  50. Summary • It was a thrilling 25 year journey • The best is yet to come • Thanks to everyone!

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