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Advanced Encryption Standard

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Presentation on theme: "Advanced Encryption Standard"— Presentation transcript:

1 Advanced Encryption Standard
Network Security

2 Advanced Encryption Standard
Objectives of the Topic After completing this topic, a student will be able to describe Advanced Encryption Standard.

3 Advanced Encryption Standard
Figures and material in this topic have been adapted from “Network Security Essentials: Applications and Standards”, 2014, by William Stallings.

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The principal drawbacks of 3DES: 1.It has three times as many rounds as DEA and is correspondingly slower. 2.Both DEA and 3DES use a 64-bit block size. Its not a reasonable candidate for long term use.

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In 1997 NIST issued a call for proposals for a new AES: 1.Should have a security strength equal to or better than 3DES and significantly improved efficiency.

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2. Must be a symmetric block cipher with a block length of 128 bits and support for key lengths of 128, 192, and 256 bits.

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3. Evaluation criteria included security, computational efficiency, memory requirements, hardware and software suitability, and flexibility

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NIST selected Rijndael as the proposed AES algorithm Developers were two cryptographers from Belgium: Dr. Joan Daemen and Dr. Vincent Rijmen published as a final standard (FIPS PUB 197) in 2001.

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AES uses a block length of 128 bits and a key length that can be 128, 192, or 256 bits. For our discussion, we assume 128 bits in this topic.

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The input to the encryption and decryption algorithms is a single 128-bit block. In FIPS PUB 197, this block is depicted as a square matrix of bytes.

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The block is copied into the State array, which is modified at each stage of encryption or decryption. After the final stage, State is copied to an output matrix.

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Similarly, the 128-bit key is depicted as a square matrix of bytes. This key is then expanded into an array of key schedule words: Each word is four bytes and total key schedule is 44 words for 128-bit key.

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Ordering of bytes in a matrix is by column. First four bytes of a 128-bit plaintext input to the encryption cipher occupy the first column of the in matrix, the second four bytes occupy the second column, and so on.

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Similarly, the first four bytes of the expanded key, which form a word, occupy the first column of the w matrix.

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AES’s Working: Four different stages are used, one of permutation and three of substitution

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Substitute bytes: Uses a table, referred to as an S-box, to perform a byte-by- byte substitution of the block. Shift rows: A simple permutation that is performed row by row.

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Mix columns: A substitution that alters each byte in a column as a function of all of the bytes in the column. Add round key: A simple bitwise XOR of the current block with a portion of the expanded key.

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Internal Details of a round.

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Some comments: AES structure is not a Feistel structure. For both encryption and decryption, the cipher begins with an Add Round Key stage, followed by nine rounds that each includes all four stages

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Each stage is easily reversible. The final round of both encryption and decryption consists of only three stages. The decryption algorithm is not identical to the encryption algorithm.

23 Advanced Encryption Standard
The decryption algorithm makes use of the expanded key in reverse order. End


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