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Security. Security Needs Computers and data are used by the authorized persons Computers and their accessories, data, and information are available to.

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Presentation on theme: "Security. Security Needs Computers and data are used by the authorized persons Computers and their accessories, data, and information are available to."— Presentation transcript:

1 Security

2 Security Needs Computers and data are used by the authorized persons Computers and their accessories, data, and information are available to the genuine users Security policy is to ensure that

3 Security Services Authentication Access control Data confidentiality Data integrity Non-repudiation

4 Security Services A user proves its identity to another party A data sender proves that the data is actually sent by him/her Authentication

5 Security Services Guard against unauthorized use of resources Access control

6 Security Services Data and its meanings are only available to those who are the genuine receivers For other parties, the data would appear to be “ rubbish ” Data confidentially

7 Security Services Guards against active attack – modification, insertion, deletion, replay If a piece of data is changed, such a change can be detected Data integrity

8 Security Services When a party sends a piece of information, it can be proved that the sender is actually that party The sender cannot subsequently deny the act of having sent a piece of information Non-repudiation

9 Security Mechanisms Encipherment Digital signature Access control To provide security services, some specific security mechanisms may be implemented:

10 DES The Data Encryption Standard (DES) is a private key encryption system developed by the U.S. government in the 1970s It was based on a previous IBM encryption system called “ Lucifer ” It was adopted as a U.S. federal standard in 1976, and then as an international standard

11 DES Overview Plaintext size : 64 bits Key size : 64 bits input, only 56 bits are used Ciphertext size : 64 bits 64 bit ciphertext Encryption 64 bit message 56 bit key

12 Strength of DES DES has been cryptanalyzed for many years by many people, no serious flaws have been revealed up to now The 56-bit key size : there are 2 56 =7.2x10 16 different possible keys May not be sufficient to resist brute- force key search attack

13 Strength of DES If it takes 1 sec to test 1 key then 228 million years are needed to test all keys If it takes 1 μsec to test 1 key then 2,280 years to test all keys If there are 1 million machines working in parallel then the key can be found in a day!

14 Triple DES Triple DES employs the Encrypt-Decrypt- Encrypt (EDE) mode of operation with two different keys – equivalent to a key of 112 bits k2 DES Decrypt DES Encrypt k1 plaintext DES Encrypt k1 ciphertext

15 Triple DES The decryption process is: k2 DES Encrypt DES Decrypt k1 ciphertext DES Decrypt k1 plaintext

16 Triple DES Triple DES can use the existing DES block When K2=K1, the triple DES system “ falls back ” to the single DES system It is “ backward compatible ” with single key DES

17 AES AES stands for “ Advanced Encryption System ” NIST (National Institute of Standards and Technology) of USA announced AES in 1997, and then called for algorithms from the public on 12 Sept 1997

18 AES Researchers from 12 different countries submitted 15 algorithms for the AES As at Aug 1999, 5 algorithms have been chosen by NIST for further consideration On 3-Oct-2000, the proposal by Rijdael [pro. Rhine doll] – Joan Daemen and Vincent Rijmen of Belgium was selected

19 Public Key Encryption

20 Each user will have a pair of keys K1 & K2 Use keys K1 to encrypt and K2 to decrypt Keep K1 private and top secret Gives out K2 to anybody who needs it K1 is called the private key K2 is called the public key

21 Two Keys In a public key encryption system, the encryption key and the decryption key are different Plaintext Encryption Key K1 Decryption Key K2

22 Proof of Identity Alice sends a message to Bob Bob can prove that the message could only have been created by Alice English Message Encryption Alice ’ s Private Key K1 Decryption Alice ’ s Public Key K2 Alice English Message Bob

23 Confidentiality + Identity Alice sends an encrypted message to Bob so that only Bob can decrypt the message and Bob can later prove that the creator was Alice English Message Encryption Alice ’ s Private Key Encryption Bob ’ s Public Key Alice Encrypted Message

24 RSA Algorithm The most widely used public key algorithm Proposed by Rivest, Shamir, and Adleman Security is based on the difficulty in factorizing a large integer that is the product of two large prime numbers E.g. 437 = ? x ? 437 = 19 x 23 Reference web page: http://www.rsa.com http://www.orst.edu/dept/honors/makmur/

25 Hash Function A Hash Functionis a one-way function y=H(x), designed to produced a fixed length “ message digest ” or a “ fingerprint ” of a variable-length message Input = x (variable Length) Hash Function Output = y (fixed length)

26 MD5 MD5 – Message Digest 5 Designed by Prof. R. Rivest of MIT Internet standard – RFC1321 Thought to be a strong hash function The message digest is 128 bits Message is processed in 512-bit blocks

27 Secure Hash Algorithm (SHA) SHA was FIPS PUB 180-1, designed by the U.S. National Security Agency (NSA) To be used in the Digital Signature Algorithm (DSA) – part of the Digital Signature Standard (DSS) Input data length is less than 2 64 bits Message digest is 160 bits

28 Digital Signature A digital signature has functions similar to those of conventional signature Support authentic messages: Signer of document can be confirmed Contents of a signed document can be verified

29 Digital Signature Generation A widely adopted scheme is based on hash function and public key encryption ….. …… ….. HashEncrypt Alice ’ s Private key ….. …… ….. DS Alice

30 Digital Signature Verification Hash Decrypt Alice ’ s Public key ….. …… ….. DS Bob Compare Equal => authentic message Not equal => non-authentic

31 Public Key Infrastructure How to give your public key to your friend? How can you be sure that the public key you obtain is indeed your friend ’ s public key? For a small number of mutually trusted users, a “ web of trust ” system is O.K.

32 Web of Trust Bob Alice David Eve Public key

33 Certification Authority For a large population of users, a central trusted party can act as a Certification Authority (CA) Users may deposit their public keys in a CA who they trust The CA may pass out the public keys to any user who need them in certificates

34 A CA Supporting Many Users CA ab c d

35 Certificate A certificate for a user (also called a subscriber) contains the user ’ s particulars and the user ’ s public key The certificate is an electronic document signed by the CA who issue it

36 Certificate CA Alice ’ s certificate Cert. I.D.:123716 Name:Alice Public key:001010 … Valid date:xx to yy …… Sign:________ Signed by CA Other certificates to other users

37 Revocation A user may revoke the validity of his/her certificate before the actual expiry date Revocation information about a CA ’ s subscribers are published in a Certificate Revocation List (CRL)

38 Public Key Infrastructure When there are many CA ’ s and many subscribers, a hierarchy can be formed linking all the CA ’ s and the subscribers This form a public key infrastructure The subscribers can communicate securely by using digital signature techniques

39 Public Key Infrastructure CA 1 user 1 user 2 user 3user 4user 5 user 6 CA 2 CA 3 CA 4


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