International Association for Cryptologic Research (IACR)
Abstract
The increasing use of resource limited devices with less memory, less computing resource and less power supply, motivates
the adoption of lightweight cryptography to provide security solution. ASCON is a finalist and GIMLI is a round 2 candidate of NIST lightweight cryptography competition. ASCON is
a sponge function based authenticated encryption (AE) scheme
suitable for high performance applications. It is suitable for use
in environments like Internet of Things (IoT) where large number
of very constrained devices communicate with high-end servers.
The drawback is that fault analyses like Statistical Ineffective
fault attack (SIFA) and Sub-Set Fault Analysis (SSFA) are possible. GIMLI is also a sponge function based AE scheme which
is susceptible to SIFA. In this work, we modify ASCON 128a
and GIMLI exploiting the pseudo-random properties of Cellular
Automata (CA) to prevent these attacks. We analyse and show
that these attacks are inapplicable in the reinforced cipher