32 research outputs found

    Cost-Effective Architectures for RC5 Brute Force Cracking

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    In this paper, we discuss the options for brute-force cracking of the RC5 block cipher, that is, for revealing the unknown secret key, given a sample ciphertext and a portion of the corresponding plaintext. First, we summarize the methods employed by the current cracking efforts. Then, we present two hardware architectures for finding the secret key using the “brute force” method. We implement the hardware in FPGA and ASIC and, based on the results, we discuss the cost and time needed to crack the cipher using today’s technology and suggest a minimum key length that can be considered secure.

    Metacomputing on clusters augmented with reconfigurable hardware

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    Secure and authenticated data communication in wireless sensor networks

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    © 2015 by the authors; licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. Securing communications in wireless sensor networks is increasingly important as the diversity of applications increases. However, even today, it is equally important for the measures employed to be energy efficient. For this reason, this publication analyzes the suitability of various cryptographic primitives for use in WSNs according to various criteria and, finally, describes a modular, PKI-based framework for confidential, authenticated, secure communications in which most suitable primitives can be employed. Due to the limited capabilities of common WSN motes, criteria for the selection of primitives are security, power efficiency and memory requirements. The implementation of the framework and the singular components have been tested and benchmarked in our tested of IRISmotes

    Energy Efficient Security Framework for Wireless Local Area Networks

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    Wireless networks are susceptible to network attacks due to their inherentvulnerabilities. The radio signal used in wireless transmission canarbitrarily propagate through walls and windows; thus a wireless networkperimeter is not exactly known. This leads them to be more vulnerable toattacks such as eavesdropping, message interception and modifications comparedto wired-line networks. Security services have been used as countermeasures toprevent such attacks, but they are used at the expense of resources that arescarce especially, where wireless devices have a very limited power budget.Hence, there is a need to provide security services that are energy efficient.In this dissertation, we propose an energy efficient security framework. Theframework aims at providing security services that take into account energyconsumption. We suggest three approaches to reduce the energy consumption ofsecurity protocols: replacement of standard security protocol primitives thatconsume high energy while maintaining the same security level, modification ofstandard security protocols appropriately, and a totally new design ofsecurity protocol where energy efficiency is the main focus. From ourobservation and study, we hypothesize that a higher level of energy savings isachievable if security services are provided in an adjustable manner. Wepropose an example tunable security or TuneSec system, which allows areasonably fine-grained security tuning to provide security services at thewireless link level in an adjustable manner.We apply the framework to several standard security protocols in wirelesslocal area networks and also evaluate their energy consumption performance.The first and second methods show improvements of up to 70% and 57% inenergy consumption compared to plain standard security protocols,respectively. The standard protocols can only offer fixed-level securityservices, and the methods applied do not change the security level. The thirdmethod shows further improvement compared to fixed-level security by reducing(about 6% to 40%) the energy consumed. This amount of energy saving can bevaried depending on the configuration and security requirements

    Query-Biased Preview over Outsourced and Encrypted Data

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    For both convenience and security, more and more users encrypt their sensitive data before outsourcing it to a third party such as cloud storage service. However, searching for the desired documents becomes problematic since it is costly to download and decrypt each possibly needed document to check if it contains the desired content. An informative query-biased preview feature, as applied in modern search engine, could help the users to learn about the content without downloading the entire document. However, when the data are encrypted, securely extracting a keyword-in-context snippet from the data as a preview becomes a challenge. Based on private information retrieval protocol and the core concept of searchable encryption, we propose a single-server and two-round solution to securely obtain a query-biased snippet over the encrypted data from the server. We achieve this novel result by making a document (plaintext) previewable under any cryptosystem and constructing a secure index to support dynamic computation for a best matched snippet when queried by some keywords. For each document, the scheme has O(d) storage complexity and O(log(d/s)+s+d/s) communication complexity, where d is the document size and s is the snippet length

    Efficient and secured rekeying based key distribution in wireless sensor architecture with Arduino and XBee

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    Since the time of their introduction, Wireless Sensor Networks (WSN) have been catching the interest of researchers. WSN have a wide range of applications, some even involving sensitive and secret information, thereby raising security concerns. Nevertheless, WSN have some constraints like limited memory, energy and computational capability, which pose an obstacle for the addition of proper security in sensor nodes. This thesis introduces a new rekeying design for WSN security framework whose implementation would dispense effective security in the sensor nodes. This proposed security framework is endowed with the capacity to address security issues, such as message integrity, confidentiality, authenticity and freshness based on symmetric key cryptography. In addition, this design does not allow the storage of any key except the initial master key in the sensor nodes prior to network deployment. This thesis also investigates reconfigurable sensor nodes in terms of execution time, memory, power consumption, and cost while running the security framework. Finally, the findings of this thesis are compared with previous studies conducted in this interesting field

    Cryptographic primitives on reconfigurable platforms.

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    Tsoi Kuen Hung.Thesis (M.Phil.)--Chinese University of Hong Kong, 2002.Includes bibliographical references (leaves 84-92).Abstracts in English and Chinese.Chapter 1 --- Introduction --- p.1Chapter 1.1 --- Motivation --- p.1Chapter 1.2 --- Objectives --- p.3Chapter 1.3 --- Contributions --- p.3Chapter 1.4 --- Thesis Organization --- p.4Chapter 2 --- Background and Review --- p.6Chapter 2.1 --- Introduction --- p.6Chapter 2.2 --- Cryptographic Algorithms --- p.6Chapter 2.3 --- Cryptographic Applications --- p.10Chapter 2.4 --- Modern Reconfigurable Platforms --- p.11Chapter 2.5 --- Review of Related Work --- p.14Chapter 2.5.1 --- Montgomery Multiplier --- p.14Chapter 2.5.2 --- IDEA Cipher --- p.16Chapter 2.5.3 --- RC4 Key Search --- p.17Chapter 2.5.4 --- Secure Random Number Generator --- p.18Chapter 2.6 --- Summary --- p.19Chapter 3 --- The IDEA Cipher --- p.20Chapter 3.1 --- Introduction --- p.20Chapter 3.2 --- The IDEA Algorithm --- p.21Chapter 3.2.1 --- Cipher Data Path --- p.21Chapter 3.2.2 --- S-Box: Multiplication Modulo 216 + 1 --- p.23Chapter 3.2.3 --- Key Schedule --- p.24Chapter 3.3 --- FPGA-based IDEA Implementation --- p.24Chapter 3.3.1 --- Multiplication Modulo 216 + 1 --- p.24Chapter 3.3.2 --- Deeply Pipelined IDEA Core --- p.26Chapter 3.3.3 --- Area Saving Modification --- p.28Chapter 3.3.4 --- Key Block in Memory --- p.28Chapter 3.3.5 --- Pipelined Key Block --- p.30Chapter 3.3.6 --- Interface --- p.31Chapter 3.3.7 --- Pipelined Design in CBC Mode --- p.31Chapter 3.4 --- Summary --- p.32Chapter 4 --- Variable Radix Montgomery Multiplier --- p.33Chapter 4.1 --- Introduction --- p.33Chapter 4.2 --- RSA Algorithm --- p.34Chapter 4.3 --- Montgomery Algorithm - Ax B mod N --- p.35Chapter 4.4 --- Systolic Array Structure --- p.36Chapter 4.5 --- Radix-2k Core --- p.37Chapter 4.5.1 --- The Original Kornerup Method (Bit-Serial) --- p.37Chapter 4.5.2 --- The Radix-2k Method --- p.38Chapter 4.5.3 --- Time-Space Relationship of Systolic Cells --- p.38Chapter 4.5.4 --- Design Correctness --- p.40Chapter 4.6 --- Implementation Details --- p.40Chapter 4.7 --- Summary --- p.41Chapter 5 --- Parallel RC4 Engine --- p.42Chapter 5.1 --- Introduction --- p.42Chapter 5.2 --- Algorithms --- p.44Chapter 5.2.1 --- RC4 --- p.44Chapter 5.2.2 --- Key Search --- p.46Chapter 5.3 --- System Architecture --- p.47Chapter 5.3.1 --- RC4 Cell Design --- p.47Chapter 5.3.2 --- Key Search --- p.49Chapter 5.3.3 --- Interface --- p.50Chapter 5.4 --- Implementation --- p.50Chapter 5.4.1 --- RC4 cell --- p.51Chapter 5.4.2 --- Floorplan --- p.53Chapter 5.5 --- Summary --- p.53Chapter 6 --- Blum Blum Shub Random Number Generator --- p.55Chapter 6.1 --- Introduction --- p.55Chapter 6.2 --- RRNG Algorithm . . --- p.56Chapter 6.3 --- PRNG Algorithm --- p.58Chapter 6.4 --- Architectural Overview --- p.59Chapter 6.5 --- Implementation --- p.59Chapter 6.5.1 --- Hardware RRNG --- p.60Chapter 6.5.2 --- BBS PRNG --- p.61Chapter 6.5.3 --- Interface --- p.66Chapter 6.6 --- Summary --- p.66Chapter 7 --- Experimental Results --- p.68Chapter 7.1 --- Design Platform --- p.68Chapter 7.2 --- IDEA Cipher --- p.69Chapter 7.2.1 --- Size of IDEA Cipher --- p.70Chapter 7.2.2 --- Performance of IDEA Cipher --- p.70Chapter 7.3 --- Variable Radix Systolic Array --- p.71Chapter 7.4 --- Parallel RC4 Engine --- p.75Chapter 7.5 --- BBS Random Number Generator --- p.76Chapter 7.5.1 --- Size --- p.76Chapter 7.5.2 --- Speed --- p.76Chapter 7.5.3 --- External Clock --- p.77Chapter 7.5.4 --- Random Performance --- p.78Chapter 7.6 --- Summary --- p.78Chapter 8 --- Conclusion --- p.81Chapter 8.1 --- Future Development --- p.83Bibliography --- p.8

    An Overview of Cryptography (Updated Version, 3 March 2016)

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    There are many aspects to security and many applications, ranging from secure commerce and payments to private communications and protecting passwords. One essential aspect for secure communications is that of cryptography...While cryptography is necessary for secure communications, it is not by itself sufficient. This paper describes the first of many steps necessary for better security in any number of situations. A much shorter, edited version of this paper appears in the 1999 edition of Handbook on Local Area Networks published by Auerbach in September 1998

    An Energy-Efficient and Reliable Data Transmission Scheme for Transmitter-based Energy Harvesting Networks

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    Energy harvesting technology has been studied to overcome a limited power resource problem for a sensor network. This paper proposes a new data transmission period control and reliable data transmission algorithm for energy harvesting based sensor networks. Although previous studies proposed a communication protocol for energy harvesting based sensor networks, it still needs additional discussion. Proposed algorithm control a data transmission period and the number of data transmission dynamically based on environment information. Through this, energy consumption is reduced and transmission reliability is improved. The simulation result shows that the proposed algorithm is more efficient when compared with previous energy harvesting based communication standard, Enocean in terms of transmission success rate and residual energy.This research was supported by Basic Science Research Program through the National Research Foundation by Korea (NRF) funded by the Ministry of Education, Science and Technology(2012R1A1A3012227)
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