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Privacy With a 4096 Bit RSA Key — Offline, On Paper

HavanaF writes "Online backup is practical, but can it offer any privacy? The Dutch security company Safeberg developed an Offline Private Key Protocol, with an asymmetric key scheme. The protocol demands that the private (decryption) key be stored away from the 'source' computer, which presumably is 'too vulnerable.' The catch is that the private key needs to be fairly large to be secure: a 4,096-bit RSA key should suffice for some years. But how to store an 800-character key offline? Safeberg introduces a machine readable paper key, with the 4k-bit key crammed in a giant 2D Datamatrix barcode. This video on key strength tells the story."

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  1. Re:What Happens When ... by maxwell+demon · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Reading numbers is more error prone. With the bar code, there are presumably lots of check digits and other such loveliness encoded into it.

    There's no reason you cannot insert check digits into the number as well.

    --
    The Tao of math: The numbers you can count are not the real numbers.