Notes for November 2, 1998 1. Greetings and Felicitations! a. Projects sent back; do you want me to post a list of names and projects? b. Midterm is Friday; open book, open notes; review session dueing discussion section 2. Puzzle of the Day a. All about "impossibilities" ? 3. DES a. Go through the algorithm 4. Public-Key Cryptography a. Basic idea: 2 keys, one private, one public b. Cryptosystem must satisfy: i. given public key, CI to get private key; ii. cipher withstands chosen plaintext attack; iii. encryption, decryption computationally feasible [note: commutativity NOT required] c. Benefits: can give confidentiality or authentiction or both 5. Use of PKC a. Normally used as key interchange system to exchange secret keys (cheap) b. Then use secret key system (too expensive to use PKC for this) 6. RSA a. Provides both authenticity and confidentiality b. Go through algorithm: Idea: C = Me mod n, M = Cd mod n, with ed mod f(n) = 1. Proof: Mf(n) mod n = 1 [by Fermat's theorem as generalized by Euler]; follows immediately from ed mod f(n) = 1. Public key is (e, n); private key is d. Choose n = pq; then f(n) = (p-1)(q-1). c. Example: p = 5, q = 7; n = 35, f(n) = (5-1)(7-1) = 24. Pick d = 11. Then de mod f(n) = 1, so choose e = 11. To encipher 2, C = Me mod n = 211 mod 35 = 2048 mod 35 = 18, and M = Cd mod n = 1811 mod 35 = 2. d. Example: p = 53, q = 61, n = 3233, f(n) = (53-1)(61-1) = 3120. Take d = 791; then e = 71. Encipher M = RENAISSANCE: A = 00, B = 01, ?, Z = 25, blank = 26. Then: M = RE NA IS SA NC Eblank = 1704 1300 0818 1800 1302 0426 C = (1704)71 mod 3233 = 3106; etc. = 3106 0100 0931 2691 1984 2927 7. Authentication: a. validating client (user) identity b. validating server (system) identity c. validating both (mutual authentication) 8. Basis a. What you know b. What you have c. What you are