Cryptography Expert Sounds Alarm At Possible Math Hack
netbuzz writes "First we learn from Bruce Schneier that the NSA may have left itself a secret back door in an officially sanctioned cryptographic random-number generator. Now Adi Shamir is warning that a math error unknown to a chip makers but discovered by a tech-savvy terrorist could lead to serious consequences, too. Remember the Intel blunder of 1996? 'Mr. Shamir wrote that if an intelligence organization discovered a math error in a widely used chip, then security software on a PC with that chip could be "trivially broken with a single chosen message." Executing the attack would require only knowledge of the math flaw and the ability to send a "poisoned" encrypted message to a protected computer, he wrote. It would then be possible to compute the value of the secret key used by the targeted system.'"
While it allows for (possibly) justified surveillance by our government, it also allows for it by others.
Also not everybody is a US citizen. This may help spying on my country, for example, by a close-to-rogue nation (US) in its disregards for international law and human rights. Some things the US administration does, would be cause for war, if they were not so powerful. Abducting citizens of other nations for example and then denying it has happened. And we are talking European citizens here.
While NIST is a US agency, these standardization efforts are international, not US domestic. Get over your US-Centrig POV. The majority in all things on this planet is non-US.
Most ACs are not even worth the keystrokes to insult them. Be generically insulted by this and ignored otherwise.
He'd also like the US out of the middle East, true. And he has some good reasons to hate the US for its meddling around there, but to say that they just want to be left alone is poppycock.
The World Wide Web is dying. Soon, we shall have only the Internet.