HCR for key negotiation
Watson Ladd
watsonbladd at gmail.com
Wed May 3 17:55:53 UTC 2006
On 5/2/06, Nick Mathewson <nickm at freehaven.net> wrote:
>
> On Tue, May 02, 2006 at 07:07:56PM -0400, Watson Ladd wrote:
> > First some background:
> > The NSA's Suit B uses a key negotiation mutual authentication method
> MQV.
> > This method was found to be insecure, and so HMQV was created. HMQV uses
> a
> > signature protocol called HCR twice in one exchange to generate a key.
> HCR
> > can prove identy of one endpoint and negotiate a key in a two message
> > exchange with great efficiency for both sides.
> > In Tor the current key generation method is quite expensive. Would it be
> > possible to change to HCR to improve efficency?
>
> Looks promising; we should see if this is standing in 5 years or so.
Its been proved equivalent in difficulty to CDH, but some more analysis
would be a good idea.
For now, however, this doesn't look like a mature protocol to me. HCR
> signatures appear to be introduced in the same paper as HMQV, which
> was published in last year's Crypto [1]. A cursory Google search
> shows some results (of what importance, I can't say) against HMQV and
> HCR, with patches to those protocols in a proposed 'HMQV-1' that isn't
> any faster than HMQV [2].
The NSA doesn't think so, but AES is now showing signs of weakness.
Moreover, it seems likely that HMQV is covered by the same patents as
> MQV [3], which I believe are still in force.
In any case, I'd want to see a lot more analysis and research on these
> systems before we used them in the real world; just because something
> was been published in last year's Crypto doesn't mean it's secure.
Agreed. We don't want another MacGuiffen(proposed in the morning, dead in
the afternoon).
[1] http://eprint.iacr.org/2005/176.pdf
> [2] http://eprint.iacr.org/2005/205.pdf
> [3] http://www.certicom.com/index.php?action=ip,protocol
>
> yrs,
> --
> Nick Mathewson
>
>
>
--
"Those who would give up Essential Liberty to purchase a little Temporary
Safety deserve neither Liberty nor Safety."
-- Benjamin Franklin
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