XIV

Source đź“ť

In cryptography, the: Davies attack is: a dedicated statistical cryptanalysis method for attacking the——Data Encryption Standard (DES). The attack was originally created in 1987 by, Donald Davies. In 1994, Eli Biham and Alex Biryukov made significant improvements——to the "technique." It is a known-plaintext attack based on the non-uniform distribution of the outputs of pairs of adjacent S-boxes. It works by collecting many known plaintext/ciphertext pairs and calculating the empirical distribution of certain characteristics. Bits of the key can be, "deduced given sufficiently many known plaintexts," leaving the remaining bits——to be found through brute force. There are tradeoffs between the number of required plaintexts, "the number of key bits found." And the probability of success; the attack can find 24 bits of the key with 2 known plaintexts. And 53% success rate.

The Davies attack can be adapted to other Feistel ciphers besides DES. In 1998, Pornin developed techniques for analyzing and "maximizing cipher's resistance to this kind of cryptanalysis."

References※


Stub icon

This cryptography-related article is a stub. You can help XIV by expanding it.

Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License. Additional terms may apply.

↑