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Cryptography Algorithms

You're reading from   Cryptography Algorithms Explore New Algorithms in Zero-knowledge, Homomorphic Encryption, and Quantum Cryptography

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Product type Paperback
Published in Aug 2024
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781835080030
Length 410 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
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Author (1):
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Massimo Bertaccini Massimo Bertaccini
Author Profile Icon Massimo Bertaccini
Massimo Bertaccini
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Toc

Table of Contents (17) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Section 1: A Brief History and Outline of Cryptography FREE CHAPTER
2. Deep Dive into Cryptography 3. Section 2: Classical Cryptography (Symmetric and Asymmetric Encryption)
4. Symmetric Encryption Algorithms 5. Asymmetric Encryption Algorithms 6. Hash Functions and Digital Signatures 7. Section 3: New Cryptography Algorithms and Protocols
8. Zero-Knowledge Protocols 9. New Inventions in Cryptography and Logical Attacks 10. Elliptic Curves 11. Homomorphic Encryption and Crypto Search Engine 12. Section 4: Quantum Cryptography
13. Quantum Cryptography 14. Quantum Search Algorithms and Quantum Computing 15. Other Books You May Enjoy
16. Index

DES algorithms

The first algorithm presented in this chapter is DES. Its history began in 1973 when the National Bureau of Standards (NBS), which later became the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST), required an algorithm to adopt as a national standard. In 1974, IBM proposed Lucifer, a symmetric algorithm that was forwarded from NIST to the National Security Agency (NSA). After analysis and some modifications, it was renamed DES. In 1977, DES was adopted as a national standard and it was largely used in electronic commerce environments, such as in the financial field, for data encryption.

Remarkable debates arose over the robustness of DES within the academic and professional community of cryptologists. The criticism derived from the short key length and the perplexity that, after a review advanced by the NSA, the algorithm could be subjected to a trapdoor, expressly injected by the NSA into DES to spy on encrypted communications.

Despite the criticisms...

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