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40-bit encryption

About: 40-bit encryption is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 5434 publications have been published within this topic receiving 149016 citations.


Papers
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01 Jan 2008
TL;DR: Evaluation of six of the most common encryption algorithms namely: AES (Rijndael), DES, DES, 3DES, RC2, Blowfish, and RC6 to demonstrate the effectiveness of each algorithm.
Abstract: Internet and networks applications are growing very fast, so the needs to protect such applications are increased. Encryption algorithms play a main role in information security systems. On the other side, those algorithms consume a significant amount of computing resources such as CPU time, memory, and battery power. This paper provides evaluation of six of the most common encryption algorithms namely: AES (Rijndael), DES, 3DES, RC2, Blowfish, and RC6. A comparison has been conducted for those encryption algorithms at different settings for each algorithm such as different sizes of data blocks, different data types ,battery power consumption, different key size and finally encryption/decryption speed. Simulation results are given to demonstrate the effectiveness of each algorithm. .

193 citations

Proceedings ArticleDOI
03 Nov 2014
TL;DR: This paper presents the first searchable encryption scheme whose updates leak no more information than the access pattern, that still has asymptotically optimal search time, linear, very small and asymptonically optimal index size and can be implemented without storage on the client (except the key).
Abstract: Searchable (symmetric) encryption allows encryption while still enabling search for keywords. Its immediate application is cloud storage where a client outsources its files while the (cloud) service provider should search and selectively retrieve those. Searchable encryption is an active area of research and a number of schemes with different efficiency and security characteristics have been proposed in the literature. Any scheme for practical adoption should be efficient -- i.e. have sub-linear search time --, dynamic -- i.e. allow updates -- and semantically secure to the most possible extent. Unfortunately, efficient, dynamic searchable encryption schemes suffer from various drawbacks. Either they deteriorate from semantic security to the security of deterministic encryption under updates, they require to store information on the client and for deleted files and keywords or they have very large index sizes. All of this is a problem, since we can expect the majority of data to be later added or changed. Since these schemes are also less efficient than deterministic encryption, they are currently an unfavorable choice for encryption in the cloud. In this paper we present the first searchable encryption scheme whose updates leak no more information than the access pattern, that still has asymptotically optimal search time, linear, very small and asymptotically optimal index size and can be implemented without storage on the client (except the key). Our construction is based on the novel idea of learning the index for efficient access from the access pattern itself. Furthermore, we implement our system and show that it is highly efficient for cloud storage.

193 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Simulations result shows the algorithm provides substantial security in just five encryption rounds, and the results of code size, memory utilization and encryption/decryption execution cycles are compared with benchmark encryption algo-rithms.
Abstract: The Internet of Things (IoT) being a promising technology of the future is expected to connect billions of devices. The increased number of communication is expected to generate mountains of data and the security of data can be a threat. The devices in the architecture are essentially smaller in size and low powered. Conventional encryption algorithms are generally computationally expensive due to their complexity and requires many rounds to encrypt, essentially wasting the constrained energy of the gadgets. Less complex algorithm, however, may compromise the desired integrity. In this paper we propose a lightweight encryption algorithm named as Secure IoT (SIT). It is a 64-bit block cipher and requires 64-bit key to encrypt the data. The architecture of the algorithm is a mixture of feistel and a uniform substitution-permutation network. Simulations result shows the algorithm provides substantial security in just five encryption rounds. The hardware implementation of the algorithm is done on a low cost 8-bit micro-controller and the results of code size, memory utilization and encryption/decryption execution cycles are compared with benchmark encryption algo-rithms. The MATLAB code for relevant simulations is available online at https://goo.gl/Uw7E0W.

191 citations

Book ChapterDOI
23 Jan 2005
TL;DR: This paper constructs an efficient “multi-receiver identity-based encryption scheme” that only needs one (or none if precomputed and provided as a public parameter) pairing computation to encrypt a single message for n receivers, in contrast to the simple construction that re-encrypts a message n times using Boneh and Franklin's identity- based encryption scheme.
Abstract: In this paper, we construct an efficient “multi-receiver identity-based encryption scheme”. Our scheme only needs one (or none if precomputed and provided as a public parameter) pairing computation to encrypt a single message for n receivers, in contrast to the simple construction that re-encrypts a message n times using Boneh and Franklin's identity-based encryption scheme, considered previously in the literature. We extend our scheme to give adaptive chosen ciphertext security. We support both schemes with security proofs under precisely defined formal security model. Finally, we discuss how our scheme can lead to a highly efficient public key broadcast encryption scheme based on the “subset-cover” framework.

187 citations

Proceedings ArticleDOI
17 Oct 2011
TL;DR: A successful attack on the bitstream encryption engine integrated in the widespread Virtex-II Pro FPGAs from Xilinx, using side-channel analysis, is developed, believed to be the first attack against thebitstream encryption of a commercial FPGA reported in the open literature.
Abstract: Over the last two decades FPGAs have become central components for many advanced digital systems, e.g., video signal processing, network routers, data acquisition and military systems. In order to protect the intellectual property and to prevent fraud, e.g., by cloning a design embedded into an FPGA or manipulating its content, many current FPGAs employ a bitstream encryption feature. We develop a successful attack on the bitstream encryption engine integrated in the widespread Virtex-II Pro FPGAs from Xilinx, using side-channel analysis. After measuring the power consumption of a single power-up of the device and a modest amount of off-line computation, we are able to recover all three different keys used by its triple DES module. Our method allows extracting secret keys from any real-world device where the bitstream encryption feature of Virtex-II Pro is enabled. As a consequence, the target product can be cloned and manipulated at the will of the attacker since no side-channel protection was included into the design of the decryption module. Also, more advanced attacks such as reverse engineering or the introduction of hardware Trojans become potential threats. While performing the side-channel attack, we were able to deduce a hypothetical architecture of the hardware encryption engine. To our knowledge, this is the first attack against the bitstream encryption of a commercial FPGA reported in the open literature.

185 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
20241
202370
2022145
20213
20205
20194