ways of transforming a block cipher to a stream cipher, enabling repeated use without changing the key.
2
votes
2answers
192 views
How can I encrypt more than 64 bit with the Data Encryption Standard?
The Data Encryption Algorithm is designed to encipher and decipher blocks of data consisting of 64 bits under control of a 56-bit key.
If my data is more than 64 bits, (suppose 66 or 67 bits), will ...
4
votes
1answer
1k views
What are the details of the DES weakness of reusing the same IV in CBC mode with the same key?
I think I once faced the recommendation, that the initialization vector should always be random and never be used twice with the same key.
How serious is this weakness?
Also, is AES less effected ...
7
votes
2answers
2k views
AES in ECB mode weakness
In a project that I'm currently working on, we are encrypting some data using AES with ECB mode in a database. Each piece of data being encrypted is very small, no more than 10 characters long.
Very ...
8
votes
1answer
426 views
Why choose an authenticated encryption mode instead of a separate MAC?
What are cryptographic reasons to choose an authenticated-encryption mode of operation (such as GCM) over a traditional encryption mode plus an independent MAC, or vice versa?
Assume there is no ...
12
votes
3answers
915 views
Hashing or encrypting twice to increase security?
Over on the bitcoin forums I asked why the bitcoin client computes SHA-256(SHA-256(x)) as its cryptographic hash for a variety of purposes. The leading theory--since the bitcoin author has ...
10
votes
3answers
559 views
Is CBC really dead?
I developed a p2p-app in C# which sends and receives encrypted text messages (50KB). For encryption, my app uses AES 128 bit in CBC cipher mode. For each message it uses a new randomly-generated IV.
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