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Computer scientists crack Internet security of the future

Started by dwarakesh, Nov 01, 2008, 06:32 PM

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dwarakesh

Computer scientists at Eindhoven University of Technology  in The Netherlands said that they had managed to crack the system.

Tanja Lange, a professor at the university, revealed that the attack succeeded this month by means of a large number of linked computers throughout the world.

Prior to this work, she and her PhD student Christiane Peters had announced the discovery of a way to speed up attacks against the 30-year-old McEliece cryptosystem earlier this year.

Along with visiting professor Daniel Bernstein, from the University of Illinois, Chicago, they wrote software that would decrypt a McEliece ciphertext in just one week on a cluster of 200 computers.

The researchers revealed that the software was run on several dozen computers in Eindhoven, Amsterdam, France, Ireland, Taiwan, and the U.S. recently.

According to them, a computer in Ireland found the ciphertext.

The team announced the successful attack at a conference in Cincinnati (US) on Post-Quantum Cryptography.

They said that the McEliece cryptosystem could be scaled to larger key sizes to avoid their attacks, and remained a leading candidate for post-quantum cryptography.

Source: ANI