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1 Message Authentication and Hash Functions Authentication Requirements Authentication Functions Message Authentication Codes Hash Functions Security of.

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Presentation on theme: "1 Message Authentication and Hash Functions Authentication Requirements Authentication Functions Message Authentication Codes Hash Functions Security of."— Presentation transcript:

1 1 Message Authentication and Hash Functions Authentication Requirements Authentication Functions Message Authentication Codes Hash Functions Security of Hash Functions and MACs

2 2 Authentication Requirements Kind of attacks (threats) in the context of communications across a network 1. Disclosure 2. Traffic analysis 3. Masquerade 4. Content modification 5. Sequence modification 6. Timing modification 7. Repudiation Measures to deal with first two attacks:  In the realm of message confidentiality, and are addressed with encryption Measures to deal with items 3 thru 6  Message authentication Measures to deal with items 7  Digital signature

3 3 Message authentication  A procedure to verify that messages come from the alleged source and have not been altered  Message authentication may also verify sequencing and timeliness Digital signature  An authentication technique that also includes measures to counter repudiation by either source or destination Authentication Requirements

4 4 Authentication Functions Message authentication or digital signature mechanism can be viewed as having two levels  At lower level: there must be some sort of functions producing an authenticator – a value to be used to authenticate a message  This lower level functions is used as primitive in a higher level authentication protocol Authentication Functions

5 5 Three classes of functions that may be used to produce an authenticator  Message encryption Ciphertext itself serves as authenticator  Message authentication code (MAC) A public function of the message and a secret key that produces a fixed-length value that serves as the authenticator  Hash function A public function that maps a message of any length into a fixed-length hash value, which serves as the authenticator Authentication Functions

6 6 Message Encryption Conventional encryption can serve as authenticator  Conventional encryption provides authentication as well as confidentiality  Requires recognizable plaintext or other structure to distinguish between well-formed legitimate plaintext and meaningless random bits e.g., ASCII text, an appended checksum, or use of layered protocols Authentication Functions

7 7 Basic Uses of Message Encryption Authentication Functions

8 8 Ways of Providing Structure Append an error-detecting code (frame check sequence (FCS)) to each message Authentication Functions

9 9 Ways of Providing Structure - 2 Suppose all the datagrams except the IP header is encrypted. If an opponent substituted some arbitrary bit pattern for the encrypted TCP segment, the resulting plaintext would not include a meaningful header Authentication Functions

10 10 Confidentiality and Authentication Implications of Message Encryption Authentication Functions

11 11 Message Authentication Code Uses a shared secret key to generate a fixed- size block of data (known as a cryptographic checksum or MAC) that is appended to the message MAC = C K (M) Assurances:  Message has not been altered  Message is from alleged sender  Message sequence is unaltered (requires internal sequencing) Similar to encryption but MAC algorithm needs not be reversible Authentication Functions

12 12 Basic Uses of MAC Authentication Functions

13 13 Basic Uses of MAC Authentication Functions

14 14 Why Use MACs?  i.e., why not just use encryption? Cleartext stays clear MAC might be cheaper Broadcast Authentication of executable codes Architectural flexibility Separation of authentication check from message use Authentication Functions

15 15 Hash Function Converts a variable size message M into fixed size hash code H(M) (Sometimes called a message digest) Can be used with encryption for authentication  E(M || H)  M || E(H)  M || signed H  E( M || signed H ) gives confidentiality  M || H( M || K )  E( M || H( M || K ) ) Authentication Functions

16 16 Authentication Functions Basic Uses of Hash Function

17 17 Authentication Functions Basic Uses of Hash Function

18 18 Authentication Functions Basic Uses of Hash Function

19 19 Message Authentication Codes MAC= C K (M) Key length requirements  Sufficient key length to thwart brute force attack MACs

20 20 Hash Functions h = H(M) M is a variable-length message, h is a fixed- length hash value, H is a hash function The hash value is appended at the source The receiver authenticates the message by recomputing the hash value Because the hash function itself is not considered to be secret, some means is required to protect the hash value Hash Functions

21 21 Hash Function Requirements 1. H can be applied to any size data block 2. H produces fixed-length output 3. H(x) is relatively easy to compute for any given x 4. H is one-way, i.e., given h, it is computationally infeasible to find any x s.t. h = H(x) 5. H is weakly collision resistant: given x, it is computationally infeasible to find any y  x s.t. H(x) = H(y) 6. H is strongly collision resistant: it is computationally infeasible to find any x and y s.t. H(x) = H(y) Hash Functions

22 22 Hash Function Requirements One-way property is essential for authentication Weak collision resistance is necessary to prevent forgery Strong collision resistance is important for resistance to birthday attack Hash Functions

23 23 Simple Hash Functions Operation of hash functions  The input is viewed as a sequence of n-bit blocks  The input is processed one block at a time in an iterative fashion to produce an n-bit hash function Simplest hash function: Bitwise XOR of every block  C i = b i1  b i2  …  b im C i = i-th bit of the hash code, 1  i  n m = number of n-bit blocks in the input b ij = i-th bit in j-th block  Known as longitudinal redundancy check Hash Functions

24 24 Simple Hash Functions Hash Functions Improvement over the simple bitwise XOR –Initially set the n-bit hash value to zero –Process each successive n-bit block of data as follows »Rotate the current hash value to the left by one bit »XOR the block into the hash value

25 25 Birthday Attack If the adversary can generate 2 m/2 variants of a valid message and an equal number of fraudulent messages The two sets are compared to find one message from each set with a common hash value The valid message is offered for signature The fraudulent message with the same hash value is inserted in its place If a 64-bit hash code is used, the level of effort is only on the order of 2 32 Conclusion: the length of the hash code must be substantial Birthday Attack

26 26 Generating 2 m/2 Variants of Valid Messages Birthday Attack Insert a number of “space-backspace-space” character pairs between words throughout the document. Variations could then be generated by substituting “space-backspace-space” in selected instances Alternatively, simply reword the message but retain the meaning

27 27 Brute-Force Attack of Hash Functions Three desirable properties of hash functions  One-way: For any given code h, it is computationally infeasible to find x s.t. H(x) = h  Weak collision resistance: For any given block x, it is computationally infeasible to find y  x s.t. H(y) = H(x)  Strong collision resistance: It is computationally infeasible to find any pair (x, y) s.t. H(y) = H(x) Brute-force attack on n-bit hash code  One-way and weak collision require 2 n effort  Strong collision requires 2 n/2 effort   If strong collision resistance is required (and this is desirable for a general-purpose secure hash code), 2 n/2 determines the strength of hash code against brute-force attack  Currently, two most popular hash codes, SHA-1 and RIPEMD- 160, provide a 160-bit hash code length Security of Hash Functions and MACs


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