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Security of symmetric encryption against mass surveillance. (English) Zbl 1317.94084

Garay, Juan A. (ed.) et al., Advances in cryptology – CRYPTO 2014. 34th annual cryptology conference, Santa Barbara, CA, USA, August 17–21, 2014. Proceedings, Part I. Berlin: Springer (ISBN 978-3-662-44370-5/pbk). Lecture Notes in Computer Science 8616, 1-19 (2014).
Summary: Motivated by revelations concerning population-wide surveillance of encrypted communications, we formalize and investigate the resistance of symmetric encryption schemes to mass surveillance. The focus is on algorithm-substitution attacks (ASAs), where a subverted encryption algorithm replaces the real one. We assume that the goal of “big brother” is undetectable subversion, meaning that ciphertexts produced by the subverted encryption algorithm should reveal plaintexts to big brother yet be indistinguishable to users from those produced by the real encryption scheme. We formalize security notions to capture this goal and then offer both attacks and defenses. In the first category we show that successful (from the point of view of big brother) ASAs may be mounted on a large class of common symmetric encryption schemes. In the second category we show how to design symmetric encryption schemes that avoid such attacks and meet our notion of security. The lesson that emerges is the danger of choice: randomized, stateless schemes are subject to attack while deterministic, stateful ones are not.
Full version see: Cryptology ePrint Archive, report 2014/438 (2014). http://eprint.iacr.org/.
For the entire collection see [Zbl 1292.94002].

MSC:

94A60 Cryptography
68P25 Data encryption (aspects in computer science)
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