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America's Next Top Hash Function Begins

You might not have realized it, but the next great battle of cryptography began this month. It's not a political battle over export laws or key escrow or NSA eavesdropping, but an academic battle over who gets to be the creator of the next hash standard.

Hash functions are the most commonly used cryptographic primitive, and the most poorly understood. You can think of them as fingerprint functions: They take an arbitrary long data stream and return a fixed length, and effectively unique, string. The security comes from the fact that while it's easy to generate the fingerprint from a file, it's infeasible to go the other way and generate a file given a fingerprint.

Originally created to make digital signatures more efficient, hashes are now used to secure the very fundamentals of our information infrastructure: in password logins, secure web connections, encryption key management, virus and malware scanning, and almost every cryptographic protocol in current use. Without cryptographic hash functions, the internet would simply not work. At the same time, there isn't a good theory of hash functions. Unlike encryption algorithms, there are no secret keys involved; this makes it harder to mathematically define exactly what hash functions are.

The National Institute of Standards and Technology, NIST, is holding a competition to replace the SHA family of hash functions. "SHA" stands for "Secure Hash Algorithm." It was developed by the NSA in 1993 to replace the commercial MD4 and MD5 algorithms, and has been updated several times since then. All the SHA algorithms are very similar, and have been increasingly under attack, so NIST wants to replace them.

The competition is important because, unlike other technological standards, committee design — balancing the interests of diverse constituents — isn't conducive to good security. Security is best when it's designed by expert teams and then subjected to public review. And cryptography is best when it's chosen by competition.

In 1997, NIST held a competition for a block cipher to replace DES. Fifteen candidates and three-and-a-half years later, Rijndael became the new Advanced Encryption Standard — AES. NIST is doing the same thing for what it's calling SHA-3 (not, for some unexplained reason, the Advanced Hash Standard or AHS).

The deadline was October 31, and NIST received 64 submissions. This isn't surprising — I predicted 80 — as most of the 15 AES submitters were professors, whose students at the time have become professors themselves, with their own students. (If NIST does a stream cipher competition in another ten years, they should expect about 256 submissions.) These submissions came from academia, from industry, and from hobbyists. CIO magazine recently interviewed one of the submitters, who is 15. Twenty-eight submissions have been made public by the submitters, and six of those have been broken.

NIST is going through all the submissions right now, making sure they are complete and proper. Their goal is to publish all accepted submissions by the end of November, in advance of the First Hash Function Candidate Conference, to be held in Belgium right after the Fast Software Encryption workshop in February.

The group expects to quickly make a first cut of algorithms — hopefully to about a dozen — and give the community a year of cryptanalysis before making a second cut in 2010. After another year of cryptanalysis, NIST will choose a winner in 2011. Expect a final standard by 2012.

My advice for software developers is to let the process run its course. While it's tempting to use the new cool algorithms in your designs, it's far too soon to trust any of them. This process is likely to result in all sorts of new research results in hash function security, and some real cryptanalytic surprises. Give the community a few years to figure out which ones are good and which aren't.

I've previously called this sort of thing a cryptographic demolition derby: The last one left standing wins. But that's only partially true. Certainly all the groups will spend the next few years trying to cryptanalyze each other, but in the end there will be a bunch of unbroken algorithms. NIST will select one based on performance and features.

NIST has stated that the goal of this process is not to choose the best standard but to choose a good standard. I think that's smart; in this process, the best is the enemy of the good. While there's no rush to choose a new standard — the SHA-2 algorithms will remain secure for the foreseeable future — we don't want to analyze the candidates forever.

Personally, I was part of a group of eight cryptographers that submitted Skein to the competition. A decade ago, writing Twofish and participating in the AES process was the most fun I had ever had in cryptography. These next few years promise to be even more fun.

---

Bruce Schneier is chief security technology officer of BT. His new book is Schneier on Security.


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http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/wired/index/~3/459059648/securitymatters_1120
2008-11-19 19:0:0

Linux Guru Reiser Seeks New Murder Trial
Hans Reiser, the 44-year-old Linux guru who was convicted in April of killing his wife, is seeking a new trial. But Reiser, who killed wife Nina Reiser, waived his right to appeal in exchange for his sentence to be reduced from 25-to-life to 15-to-life. The deal included leading authorities to the hills in Oakland, Calif., where he buried his 31-year-old wife who was divorcing him.
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http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/wired/index/~3/459059649/linux-guru-reis.html
2008-11-19 18:30:0

Introducing the Threat Level Rewards Program
The National Review Online is courting financial contributions by offering "new opportunities for access" to its editors and writers. Not to be outdone, here's the skinny on Threat Level's new sponsorship drive. Break out your wallet. We're going cheap.
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http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/wired/index/~3/459030070/fund.html
2008-11-19 17:40:0

Prosecutor: Lori Drew Intended to 'Prey' on Girl's Psyche
The woman accused of making unauthorized use of MySpace to inflict emotional harm on a 13-year-old girl, who then committed suicide, "fully intended to hurt and prey on Megan Meier's psyche," a federal prosecutor charged Wednesday, as opening statements began in the first federal cyber-bullying trial.
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http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/wired/index/~3/459030071/index.html
2008-11-19 17:30:0

Apple Bends to Studios, Adds Copyright Protection to MacBooks
Apple quietly installed copy protection in its new MacBooks, blocking some honest customers from watching iTunes movies on their external displays.
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http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/wired/index/~3/459059650/apple-adds-copy.html
2008-11-19 17:30:0

Under Worm Assault, Military Bans Disks, USB Drives
The Defense Department's geeks are spooked by a rapidly spreading worm crawling across their networks. So they've suspended the use of so-called thumb drives, CDs, flash media cards, and all other removable data-storage devices from both their secret and unclassified nets, to try to keep the worm from multiplying any further.
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http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/wired/index/~3/459016898/army-bans-usb-d.html
2008-11-19 16:12:0

Genome Hacking Could Reverse-Engineer Extinct Mammoth
Using the hair of a woolly mammoth preserved in the Siberian tundra, scientists have reconstructed 80 percent of the mammoth genome, raising the possibility of one day resurrecting the beast.
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http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/wired/index/~3/458996044/genome-hacking.html
2008-11-19 16:12:0

Physicists Find Dark Matter, or Something Even More Strange
Physicists have detected electrons over Antarctica that could be the first ever direct evidence of the mysterious dark matter that scientists say makes up 20 percent of the universe.
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http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/wired/index/~3/458996045/darkmatter.html
2008-11-19 16:0:0

Let Google's My Maps Be Your Geo Database
Store geolocations inside a My Maps mashup and access the data anywhere on the web. The RSS feed produced by Google can be read by other services, or on your own site with the Google Maps API.
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http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/wired/index/~3/458898364/Let_My_Maps_Be_Your_Geo_Database
2008-11-19 15:0:0

Make Your Site an iPhone App
Use an open source development kit to easily transform your website into an iPhone App with JavaScript access to location and accelerometer.
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http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/wired/index/~3/458872641/Make_Your_Site_An_iPhone_App
2008-11-19 14:30:0



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