Network Working Group                                           S. Kelly
Request for Comments: 4772                                Aruba Networks
Category: Informational                                    December 2006


  Security Implications of Using the Data Encryption Standard (DES)

Status of This Memo

  This memo provides information for the Internet community.  It does
  not specify an Internet standard of any kind.  Distribution of this
  memo is unlimited.

Copyright Notice

  Copyright (C) The IETF Trust (2006).

Abstract

  The Data Encryption Standard (DES) is susceptible to brute-force
  attacks, which are well within the reach of a modestly financed
  adversary.  As a result, DES has been deprecated, and replaced by the
  Advanced Encryption Standard (AES).  Nonetheless, many applications
  continue to rely on DES for security, and designers and implementers
  continue to support it in new applications.  While this is not always
  inappropriate, it frequently is.  This note discusses DES security
  implications in detail, so that designers and implementers have all
  the information they need to make judicious decisions regarding its
  use.






















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Table of Contents

  1. Introduction ....................................................3
     1.1. Executive Summary of Findings and Recommendations ..........4
          1.1.1. Recommendation Summary ..............................4
  2. Why Use Encryption? .............................................5
  3. Real-World Applications and Threats .............................6
  4. Attacking DES ...................................................8
     4.1. Brute-Force Attacks ........................................9
          4.1.1. Parallel and Distributed Attacks ...................10
     4.2. Cryptanalytic Attacks .....................................10
     4.3. Practical Considerations ..................................12
  5. The EFF DES Cracker ............................................12
  6. Other DES-Cracking Projects ....................................13
  7. Building a DES Cracker Today ...................................14
     7.1. FPGAs .....................................................15
     7.2. ASICs .....................................................16
     7.3. Distributed PCs ...........................................16
          7.3.1. Willing Participants ...............................17
          7.3.2. Spyware and Viruses and Botnets (oh my!) ...........18
  8. Why is DES Still Used? .........................................19
  9. Security Considerations ........................................20
  10. Acknowledgements ..............................................21
  Appendix A.  What About 3DES? .....................................22
     A.1. Brute-Force Attacks on 3DES ...............................22
     A.2. Cryptanalytic Attacks Against 3DES ........................23
          A.2.1. Meet-In-The-Middle (MITM) Attacks ..................23
          A.2.2. Related Key Attacks ................................24
     A.3. 3DES Block Size ...........................................25
  Informative References ............................................25





















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1.  Introduction

  The Data Encryption Standard [DES] is the first encryption algorithm
  approved by the U.S. government for public disclosure.  Brute-force
  attacks became a subject of speculation immediately following the
  algorithm's release into the public sphere, and a number of
  researchers published discussions of attack feasibility and explicit
  brute-force attack methodologies, beginning with [DH77].

  In the early to mid 1990s, numerous additional papers appeared,
  including Wiener's "Efficient DES Key Search" [WIEN94], and "Minimal
  Key Lengths for Symmetric Ciphers to Provide Adequate Commercial
  Security" [BLAZ96].  While these and various other papers discussed
  the theoretical aspects of DES-cracking machinery, none described a
  specific implementation of such a machine.  In 1998, the Electronic
  Frontier Foundation (EFF) went much further, actually building a
  device and freely publishing the implementation details for public
  review [EFF98].

  Despite the fact that the EFF clearly demonstrated that DES could be
  brute-forced in an average of about 4.5 days with an investment of
  less than $250,000 in 1998, many continue to rely on this algorithm
  even now, more than 8 years later.  Today, the landscape is
  significantly different: DES can be broken by a broad range of
  attackers using technologies that were not available in 1998,
  including cheap Field Programmable Gate Arrays (FPGAs) and botnets
  [BOT05].  These and other attack methodologies are described in
  detail below.

  Given that the Advanced Encryption Standard [AES] has been approved
  by the U.S. government (under certain usage scenarios) for top-secret
  applications [AES-NSA], and that triple DES (3DES) is not susceptible
  to these same attacks, one might wonder: why even bother with DES
  anymore?  Under more ideal circumstances, we might simply dispense
  with it, but unfortunately, this would not be so simple today.  DES
  has been widely deployed since its release in the 1970s, and many
  systems rely on it today.  Wholesale replacement of such systems
  would be very costly.  A more realistic approach entails gradual
  replacement of these systems, and this implies a term of backward
  compatibility support of indefinite duration.

  In addition to backward compatibility, in isolated instances there
  may be other valid arguments for continued DES support.  Still,
  reliance upon this deprecated algorithm is a serious error from a
  security design perspective in many cases.  This note aims to clarify
  the security implications of this choice given the state of
  technology today, so that developers can make an informed decision as
  to whether or not to implement this algorithm.



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1.1.  Executive Summary of Findings and Recommendations

  For many years now, DES usage has been actively discouraged by the
  security area of the IETF, but we nevertheless continue to see it in
  use.  Given that there are widely published accounts of real attacks
  and that we have been vocally discouraging its use, a question
  arises: why aren't people listening?  We can only speculate, but one
  possibility is that they simply do not understand the extent to which
  DES has been marginalized by advancing cryptographic science and
  technology.  Another possibility is that we have not yet been
  appropriately explicit and aggressive about this.  With these
  particular possibilities in mind, this note sets out to dispel any
  remaining illusions.

  The depth of background knowledge required to truly understand and
  fully appreciate the security risks of using DES today is somewhat
  daunting, and an extensive survey of the literature suggests that
  there are very few published materials encompassing more than a
  fraction of the considerations all in one place, with [CURT05] being
  one notable exception.  However, even that work does not gather all
  of the pieces in such a way as to inform an implementer of the
  current real-world risks, so here we try to fill in any remaining
  gaps.

  For convenience, the next section contains a brief summary of
  recommendations.  If you don't know the IETF's current position on
  DES, and all you want is a summary, you may be content to simply read
  the recommendation summary section, and skip the rest of the
  document.  If you want a more detailed look at the history and
  current state-of-the-art with respect to attacking DES, you will find
  that in subsequent sections.

1.1.1.  Recommendation Summary

  There are several ways to attack a cryptographic algorithm, from
  simple brute force (trying each key until you find the right one) to
  more subtle cryptanalytic approaches, which take into account the
  internal structure of the cipher.  As noted in the introduction, a
  dedicated system capable of brute-forcing DES keys in less than 5
  days was created in 1998.  Current "Moore's Law" estimates suggest
  that a similar machine could be built today for around $15,000 or
  less, and for the cost of the original system (~$250,000) we could
  probably build a machine capable of cracking DES keys in a few hours.

  Additionally, there have been a number of successful distributed
  attacks on DES [CURT05], and with the recent arrival of botnets
  [BOT05], these results are all the more onerous.  Furthermore, there
  are a number of cryptanalytic attacks against DES, and while some of



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  these remain purely theoretical in nature at present, at least one
  was recently implemented using a FPGA that can deduce a DES key in
  12-15 hours [FPL02].  Clearly, DES cannot be considered a "strong"
  cryptographic algorithm by today's standards.

  To summarize current recommendations on using DES, the simple answer
  is "don't use it - it's not safe."  While there may be use cases for
  which the security of DES would be sufficient, it typically requires
  a security expert to determine when this is true.  Also, there are
  much more secure algorithms available today (e.g., 3DES, AES) that
  are much safer choices.  The only general case in which DES should
  still be supported is when it is strictly required for backward
  compatibility, and when the cost of upgrading outweighs the risk of
  exposure.  However, even in these cases, recommendations should
  probably be made to phase out such systems.

  If you are simply interested in the current recommendations, there
  you have it: don't use DES.  If you are interested in understanding
  how we arrive at this conclusion, read on.

2.  Why Use Encryption?

  In order to assess the security implications of using DES, it is
  useful and informative to review the basic rationale for using
  encryption.  In general, we encrypt information because we desire
  confidentiality.  That is, we want to limit access to information, to
  keep something private or secret.  In some cases, we want to share
  the information within a limited group, and in other cases, we may
  want to be the sole owner of the information in question.

  Sometimes, the information we want to protect has value only to the
  individual (e.g., a diary), and a loss of confidentiality, while
  potentially damaging in some limited ways, would typically not be
  catastrophic.  In other cases, the information might have significant
  financial implications (e.g., a company's strategic marketing plan).
  And in yet others, lives could be at stake.

  In order to gauge our confidentiality requirements in terms of
  encryption strength, we must assess the value of the information we
  are trying to protect, both to us and to a potential attacker.  There
  are various metrics we can employ for this purpose:

  o  Cost of confidentiality loss: What could we lose if an adversary
     were to discover our secret?  This gives some measure of how much
     effort we should be willing to expend to protect the secret.






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  o  Value to adversary: What does the attacker have to gain by
     discovering our secret?  This gives some measure of how much an
     adversary might reasonably be willing to spend to learn the
     secret.

  o  Window of opportunity: How long does the information have value to
     an adversary?  This gives some measure of how acceptable a
     weakness might be.  For example, if the information is valuable to
     an attacker for months and it takes only days to break the
     encryption, we probably need much stronger encryption.  On the
     other hand, if the window of opportunity is measured in seconds,
     then an encryption algorithm that takes days to break may be
     acceptable.

  There are certainly other factors we would consider in conducting a
  comprehensive security analysis, but these are enough to give a
  general sense of important questions to answer when evaluating DES as
  a candidate encryption algorithm.

3.  Real-World Applications and Threats

  Numerous commonly used applications rely on encryption for
  confidentiality in today's Internet.  To evaluate the sufficiency of
  a given cryptographic algorithm in this context, we should begin by
  asking some basic questions: what are the real-world risks to these
  applications, i.e., how likely is it that an application might
  actually be attacked, and by whom, and for what reasons?

  While it is difficult to come up with one-size-fits-all answers based
  on general application descriptions, we can easily get some sense of
  the relative threat to many of these applications.  It is important
  to note that what follows is not an exhaustive enumeration of all
  likely threats and attacks, but rather, a sampling that illustrates
  that real threats are more prevalent than intuition might suggest.

  Here are some examples of common applications and related threats:

  o  Site-to-site VPNs: Often, these are used to connect geographically
     separate corporate offices.  Data traversing such links is often
     business critical, and sometimes highly confidential.  The FBI
     estimates that every year, billions of U.S. dollars are lost to
     foreign competitors who deliberately target economic intelligence
     in U.S. industry and technologies [FBI06].  Searching for
     'corporate espionage' in Google yields many interesting links,
     some of which indicate that foreign competitors are not the only
     threat to U.S. businesses.  Obviously, this threat can be
     generalized to include businesses of any nationality.




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  o  Remote network access for business: See previous item.

  o  Webmail/email encryption: See Site-to-site VPNs.

  o  Online banking: Currently, the most common threat to online
     banking is in the form of "phishing", which does not rely on
     breaking session encryption, but instead relies on tricking users
     into providing their account information.  In general, direct
     attacks on session encryption for this application do not scale
     well.  However, if a particular bank were known to use a weak
     encryption algorithm for session security, it might become
     worthwhile to develop a broader attack against that bank.  Given
     that organized criminal elements have been found behind many
     phishing attacks, it is not difficult to imagine such scenarios.

  o  Electronic funds transfers (EFTs): The ability to replay or
     otherwise modify legitimate EFTs has obvious financial incentives
     (and implications).  Also, an industrial spy might see a great
     deal of intelligence value in the financial transactions of a
     target company.

  o  Online purchases (E-commerce): The FBI has investigated a number
     of organized attacks on e-commerce applications [FBI01].  If an
     attacker has the ability to monitor e-commerce traffic directed to
     a large merchant that relies on weak encryption, the attacker
     could harvest a great deal of consumer credit information.  This
     is the sort of data "phishers" currently harvest on a much smaller
     scale, so one can easily imagine the value of such a target.

  o  Internet-based VoIP applications (e.g., Skype): While many uses of
     this technology are innocuous (e.g., long distance calls to family
     members), VoIP technology is also used for business purposes (see
     discussion of FBI estimates regarding corporate espionage above).

  o  Cellular telephony: Cell phones are very common, and are
     frequently used for confidential conversations in business,
     medicine, law enforcement, and other applications.

  o  Wireless LAN: Wireless technology is used by many businesses,
     including the New York Stock Exchange [NYSE1].  The financial
     incentives for an attacker are significant in some cases.

  o  Personal communications (e.g., secure instant messaging): Such
     communication may be used for corporate communications (see
     industrial espionage discussion above), and may also be used for
     financial applications such as stock/securities trading.  This has
     both corporate/industrial espionage and financial implications.




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  o  Laptop hard-drive encryption: See discussion on corporate/
     industrial espionage above.  Also, consider that stolen and lost
     laptops have been cited for some of the more significant losses of
     control over sensitive personal information in recent years,
     notably the Veterans Affairs data loss [VA1].

  There are real-world threats to everyday encryption applications,
  some of which could be very lucrative to an attacker (and by
  extension, very costly to the victim).  It is important to note that
  if some of these attacks are infrequent today, it is precisely
  because the threats are recognized, and appropriately strong
  cryptographic algorithms are used.  If "weak" cryptographic
  algorithms were to be used instead, the implications are indeed
  thought-provoking.

  In keeping with the objectives of this document, it is important to
  note that the U.S. government has never approved the use of DES for
  anything but unclassified applications.  While DES is still approved
  for unclassified uses until May 19, 2007, the U.S. government clearly
  sees the need to move to higher ground.  For details on the National
  Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) DES Transition plan, see
  [NIST-TP].  Despite this fact, DES is still sometimes chosen to
  protect some of the applications described above.  Below, we discuss
  why this should, in many cases, be remedied.

4.  Attacking DES

  DES is a 64-bit block cipher having a key size of 56 bits.  The key
  actually has 64 bits (matching the block size), but 1 bit in each
  byte has been designated a 'parity' bit, and is not used for
  cryptographic purposes.  For a full discussion of the history of DES
  along with an accessible description of the algorithm, see [SCHN96].

  A detailed description of the various types of attacks on
  cryptographic algorithms is beyond the scope of this document, but
  for clarity, we provide the following brief descriptions.  There are
  two general aspects of attacks we must consider: the form of the
  inputs/outputs along with how we might influence them, and the
  internal function of the cryptographic operations themselves.

  In terms of input/output form, some of the more commonly discussed
  attack characteristics include the following:

  o  known plaintext - the attacker knows some of the plaintext
     corresponding to some of the ciphertext

  o  ciphertext-only - only ciphertext is available to the attacker,
     who has little or no information about the plaintext



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  o  chosen plaintext - the attacker can choose which plaintext is
     encrypted, and obtain the corresponding ciphertext

  o  birthday attacks - relies on the fact that for N elements,
     collisions can be expected in ~sqrt(N) randomly chosen samples;
     for systems using CBC mode with random Initialization Vectors
     (IVs), ciphertext collisions can be expected in about 2^28
     samples.  Such collisions leak information about the corresponding
     plaintexts: if the same cryptographic key is used, then the xor of
     the IVs is equal to the xor of the plaintexts.

  o  meet-in-the-middle attacks - leverages birthday characteristic to
     precompute potential key collision values

  Due to the limited scope of this document, these are very brief
  descriptions of very complex subject matter.  For more detailed
  discussions on these and many related topics, see [SCHN96], [HAC], or
  [FERG03].

  As for attack characteristics relating to the operational aspects of
  cipher algorithms, there are essentially two broad classes we
  consider: cryptanalytic attacks, which exploit some internal
  structure or function of the cipher algorithm, and brute-force
  attacks, in which the attacker systematically tries keys until the
  right one is found.  These could alternatively be referred to as
  white box and black box attacks, respectively.  These are discussed
  further below.

4.1.  Brute-Force Attacks

  In general, a brute-force attack consists of trying each possible key
  until the correct key is found.  In the worst case, this will require
  2^n steps for a key size of n bits, and on average, it will require
  2^n-1 steps.  For DES, this implies 2^56 encryption operations in the
  worst case, and 2^55 encryption operations on average, if we assume
  no shortcuts exist.  As it turns out, the complementation property of
  DES provides an attack that yields a reduction by a factor of 2 for a
  chosen plaintext attack, so this attack requires an average of 2^54
  encryption operations.

  Above, we refer to 2^n 'steps'; note that what a 'step' entails
  depends to some extent on the first attack aspect described above,
  i.e., what influence and knowledge we have with respect to input/
  output forms.  Remember, in the worst case, we will be performing
  72,057,594,037,927,936 -- over 72 quadrillion -- of these 'steps'.
  In the most difficult case, we have ciphertext only, and no knowledge
  of the input, and this is very important.




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  If the input is effectively random, we cannot tell by simply looking
  at a decrypted block whether we've succeeded or not.  We may have to
  resort to other potentially expensive computation to make this
  determination.  While the effect of any additional computation will
  be linear across all keys, repeating a large amount of added
  computation up to 72 quadrillion times could have a significant
  impact on the cost of a brute-force attack against the algorithm.
  For example, if it takes 1 additional microsecond per computation,
  this will add almost 101 days to our worst-case search time, assuming
  a serial key search.

  On the other hand, if we can control the input to the encryption
  function (known plaintext), we know precisely what to expect from the
  decryption function, so detecting that we've found the key is
  straightforward.  Alternatively, even if we don't know the exact
  input, if we know something about it (e.g., that it's ASCII), with
  limited additional computation we can infer that we've most likely
  found a key.  Obviously, which of these conditions holds may
  significantly influence attack time.

4.1.1.  Parallel and Distributed Attacks

  Given that a brute-force attack involves systematically trying keys
  until we find the right one, it is obviously a good candidate for
  parallelization.  If we have N processors, we can find the key
  roughly N times faster than if we have only 1 processor.  This
  requires some sort of centralized control entity that distributes the
  work and monitors the search process, but is quite straightforward to
  implement.

  There are at least two approaches to parallelization of a brute-force
  attack on a block cipher: the first is to build specialized high-
  speed hardware that can rapidly cycle through keys while performing
  the cryptographic and comparison operations, and then replicate that
  hardware many times, while providing for centralized control.  The
  second involves using many copies of general purpose hardware (e.g.,
  a PC), and distributing the load across these while placing them
  under the control of one or more central systems.  Both of these
  approaches are discussed further in sections 5 and 6.

4.2.  Cryptanalytic Attacks

  Brute-force attacks are so named because they don't require much
  intelligence in the attack process -- they simply try one key after
  the other, with little or no intelligent keyspace pruning.
  Cryptanalytic attacks, on the other hand, rely on application of some
  intelligence ahead of time, and by doing so, provide for a
  significant reduction of the search space.



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  While an in-depth discussion of cryptanalytic techniques and the
  resulting attacks is well beyond the scope of this document, it is
  important to briefly touch on this area in order to set the stage for
  subsequent discussion.  It is also important to note that, in
  general, cryptanalysis can be applied to any cryptographic algorithm
  with varying degrees of success.  However, we confine ourselves here
  to discussing specific results with respect to DES.

  Here is a very brief summary of the currently known cryptanalytic
  attacks on DES:

  o  Differential Cryptanalysis - First discussed by Biham and Shamir,
     this technique (putting it very simply) analyzes how differences
     in plaintext correspond to differences in ciphertext.  For more
     detail, see [BIH93].

  o  Linear Cryptanalysis - First described by Matsui, this technique
     uses linear approximations to describe the internal functions of
     DES.  For more detail, see [MAT93].

  o  Interpolation Attack - This technique represents the S-boxes of
     DES with algebraic functions, and then estimates the coefficients
     of the functions.  For more information, see [JAK97].

  o  Key Collision Attack - This technique exploits the birthday
     paradox to produce key collisions [BIH96].

  o  Differential Fault Analysis - This attack exploits the electrical
     characteristics of the encryption device, selectively inducing
     faults and comparing the results with uninfluenced outputs.  For
     more information, see [BIH96-2].

  Currently, the best publicly known cryptanalytic attacks on DES are
  linear and differential cryptanalysis.  These attacks are not
  generally considered practical, as they require 2^43 and 2^47 known
  plaintext/ciphertext pairs, respectively.  To get a feel for what
  this means in practical terms, consider the following:

  o  For linear cryptanalysis (the more efficient of the two attacks),
     the attacker must pre-compute and store 2^43 ciphertexts; this
     requires 8,796,093,022,208 (almost 9 trillion) encryption
     operations.

  o  Each ciphertext block is 8 bytes, so the total required storage is
     70,368,744,177,664 bytes, or about 70,369 gigabytes of storage.
     If the plaintext blocks cannot be automatically derived, they too
     must be stored, potentially doubling the storage requirements.




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  o  The 2^43 known plaintext blocks must be somehow fed to the device
     under attack, and that device must not change the encryption key
     during this time.

  Clearly, there are practical issues with this attack.  Still, it is
  sobering to look at how much more realistic 70,000 gigabytes of
  storage is today than it must have seemed in 1993, when Matsui first
  proposed this attack.  Today, 400-GB hard drives can be had for
  around $0.35/gigabyte.  If we only needed to store the known
  ciphertext, this amounts to ~176 hard drives at a cost of less than
  $25,000.  This is probably practical with today's technology for an
  adversary with significant financial resources, though it was
  difficult to imagine in 1993.  Still, numerous other practical issues
  remain.

4.3.  Practical Considerations

  Above, we described several types of attacks on DES, some of which
  are more practical than others, but it's very important to recognize
  that brute force represents the very worst case, and cryptanalytic
  attacks can only improve on this.  If a brute-force attack against a
  given DES application really is feasible, then worrying about the
  practicality of the other theoretical attack modes is just a
  distraction.  The bottom line is this: if DES can be brute-forced at
  a cost the attacker can stomach today, this cost will invariably come
  down as technology advances.

5.  The EFF DES Cracker

  On the question as to whether DES is susceptible to brute-force
  attack from a practical perspective, the answer is a resounding and
  unequivocal "yes".  In 1998, the Electronic Frontier Foundation
  financed the construction of a "DES Cracker", and subsequently
  published "Cracking DES" [EFF98].  For a cost of less than $250,000,
  this system can find a 56-bit DES key in the worst-case time of
  around 9 days, and in 4.5 days on average.

  Quoting from [EFF98],

  "The design of the EFF DES Cracker is simple in concept.  It consists
  of an ordinary personal computer connected with a large array of
  custom chips.  Software in the personal computer instructs the custom
  chips to begin searching, and interacts with the user.  The chips run
  without further help from the software until they find a potentially
  interesting key, or need to be directed to search a new part of the
  key space.  The software periodically polls the chips to find any
  potentially interesting keys that they have turned up.




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  The hardware's job isn't to find the answer. but rather to eliminate
  most of the answers that are incorrect.  Software is then fast enough
  to search the remaining potentially-correct keys, winnowing the false
  positives from the real answer.  The strength of the machine is that
  it replicates a simple but useful search circuit thousands of times,
  allowing the software to find the answer by searching only a tiny
  fraction of the key space.

  As long as there is a small bit of software to coordinate the effort,
  the problem of searching for a DES key is 'highly parallelizable'.
  This means the problem can be usefully solved by many machines
  working in parallel, simultaneously.  For example, a single DES-
  Cracker chip could find a key by searching for many years.  A
  thousand DES-Cracker chips can solve the same problem in one
  thousandth of the time.  A million DES-Cracker chips could
  theoretically solve the same problem in about a millionth of the
  time, though the overhead of starting each chip would become visible
  in the time required.  The actual machine we built contains 1536
  chips."

  This project clearly demonstrated that a practical system for brute
  force DES attacks was well within reach of many more than previously
  assumed.  Practically any government in the world could easily
  produce such a machine, and in fact, so could many businesses.  And
  that was in 1998; the technological advances since then have greatly
  reduced the cost of such a device.  This is discussed further below.

6.  Other DES-Cracking Projects

  In the mid-1990s, many were interested in whether or not DES was
  breakable in a practical sense.  RSA sponsored a series of DES
  Challenges over a 3-year period beginning January of 1997.  These
  challenges were created in order to help underscore the point that
  cryptographic strength limitations imposed by the U.S. government's
  export policies were far too modest to meet the security requirements
  of many users.

  The first DES challenge was solved by the DESCHALL group, led by
  Rocke Verser, Matt Curtin, and Justin Dolske [CURT05][RSA1].  They
  created a loosely-knit distributed effort staffed by volunteers and
  backed by Universities and corporations all over the world who
  donated their unused CPU cycles to the effort.  They found the key in
  90 days.

  The second DES challenge was announced on December 19, 1997
  [RSA2][CURT05], and on February 26, 1998, RSA announced a winner.
  This time, the challenge was solved by group called distributed.net




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  working together with the EFF, in a total of 39 days [RSA3] [CURT05].
  This group coordinated 22,000 participants and over 50,000 CPUs.

  The third DES challenge was announced on December 22, 1998
  [RSA4][CURT05], and on January 19, 1999, RSA announced the winner.
  This time, the challenge was again solved by distributed.net working
  together with the EFF, in a total of 22 hours [RSA5].  This was a
  dramatic improvement over the second challenge, and should give some
  idea of where we're headed with respect to DES.

7.  Building a DES Cracker Today

  We've seen what was done in the late 1990s -- what about today?  A
  survey of the literature might lead one to conclude that this topic
  is no longer interesting to cryptographers.  Hence, we are left to
  infer the possibilities based on currently available technologies.
  One way to derive an approximation is to apply a variation on
  "Moore's Law": assume that the cost of a device comparable to the one
  built by the EFF would be halved roughly every N months.  If we take
  N=18, then for a device costing $250,000 at the end of 1998, this
  would predict the following cost curve:

  o  mid-2000............: $125,000

  o  beginning of 2002...: $62,500

  o  mid-2003............: $31,250

  o  beginning of 2006...: $15,625

  It's important to note that strictly speaking, "Moore's Law" is more
  an informal approximation than a law, although it has proven to be
  uncannily accurate over the last 40 years or so.  Also, some would
  disagree with the use of an 18-month interval, preferring a more
  conservative 24 months instead.  So, these figures should be taken
  with the proverbial grain of salt.  Still, it's important to
  recognize that this is the cost needed not to crack one key, but to
  get into the key-cracking business.  Offering key-cracking services
  and keeping the machine relatively busy would dramatically decrease
  the cost to a few hundred dollars per unit or less.

  Given that such calculations roughly hold for other computing
  technologies over the same time interval, the estimate above does not
  seem too unreasonable, and is probably within a factor of two of
  today's costs.  Clearly, this would seem to indicate that DES-
  cracking hardware is within reach of a much broader group than in
  1998, and it is important to note that this assumes no design or
  algorithm improvements since then.



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  To put this in a slightly different light, let's consider the typical
  rendition of Moore's Law for such discussions.  Rather than
  considering shrinking cost for the same capability, consider instead
  increasing capability for the same cost (i.e., doubling circuit
  densities every N months).  Again choosing N=18, our DES-cracking
  capability (in worst-case time per key) could be expected to have
  approximately followed this performance curve over the last 7 or so
  years:

  o  1998................: 9 days

  o  mid-2000............: 4.5 days

  o  beginning of 2002...: 2.25 days

  o  mid-2003............: 1.125 days

  o  beginning of 2006...: 0.5625 days

  That's just over a half-day in the worst case for 2006, and under 7
  hours on average.  And this, for an investment of less than $250,000.
  It's also very important to note that we are talking about worst-case
  and average times here - sometimes, keys will be found much more
  quickly.  For example, using such a machine, 1/4 of all possible DES
  keys will be found within 3.375 hours. 1/8 of the keys will be found
  in less than 1 hour and 42 minutes.  And this assumes no algorithmic
  improvements have occurred.  And again, this is an estimate; your
  actual mileage may vary, but the estimate is probably not far from
  reality.

7.1.  FPGAs

  Since the EFF device first appeared, Field Programmable Gate Arrays
  (FPGAs) have become quite common, and far less costly than they were
  in 1998.  These devices allow low-level logic programming, and are
  frequently used to prototype new logic designs prior to the creation
  of more expensive custom chips (also known as Application Specific
  Integrated Circuits, or ASICs).  They are also frequently used in
  place of ASICs due to their lower cost and/or flexibility.  In fact,
  a number of embedded systems implementing cryptography have employed
  FPGAs for this purpose.

  Due to their generalized nature, FPGAs are naturally slower than
  ASICs.  While the speed difference varies based on many factors, it
  is reasonable for purposes of this discussion to say that well-
  designed FPGA implementations typically perform cryptographic





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  operations at perhaps 1/4 the speed of well-designed ASICs performing
  the same operations, and sometimes much slower than that.  The
  significance of this comparison will become obvious shortly.

  In our Moore's Law estimate above, we noted that the cost
  extrapolation assumes no design or algorithm improvements since 1998.
  It also implies that we are still talking about a brute-force attack.
  In section 4 ("Attacking DES"), we discussed several cryptanalytic
  attacks, including an attack that employs linear cryptanalysis
  [MAT93].  In general, this attack has been considered impractical,
  but in 2002, a group at Universite Catholique de Louvain in Belgium
  built a DES cracker based on linear cryptanalysis, which, employing a
  single FPGA, returns a DES key in 12-15 hours [FPL02].

  While there are still some issues of practicality in terms of
  applying this attack in the real world (i.e., the required number of
  known plaintext-ciphertext pairs), this gives a glimpse of where
  technology is taking us with respect to DES attack capabilities.

7.2.  ASICs

  Application Specific Integrated Circuits are specialized chips,
  typically optimized for a particular set of operations (e.g.,
  encryption).  There are a number of companies that are in the
  business of designing and selling cryptographic ASICs, and such chips
  can be had for as little as $15 each at the low end.  But while these
  chips are potentially much faster than FPGAs, they usually do not
  represent a proportionally higher threat when it comes to
  DES-cracking system construction.

  The primary reason for this is cost: it currently costs more than
  $1,000,000 to produce an ASIC.  There is no broad commercial market
  for crypto-cracking ASICs, so the number a manufacturer could expect
  to sell is probably small.  Likewise, a single attacker is not likely
  to require more than a few of these.  The bottom line: per-chip costs
  would be very high; when compared to the costs of FPGAs capable of
  similar performance, the FPGAs are clear winners.  This doesn't mean
  such ASICs have never been built, but the return is probably not
  worth the investment for the average attacker today, given the other
  available options.

7.3.  Distributed PCs

  Parallel processing is a powerful tool for conducting brute-force
  attacks against a block cipher.  Since each key can be tested
  independently, the keyspace can easily be carved up and distributed
  across an arbitrary number of processors, all of which are running
  identical code.  A central "control" processor is required for



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  distributing tasks and evaluating results, but this is
  straightforward to implement, and this paradigm has been applied to
  many computing problems.

  While the EFF demonstrated that a purpose-built system is far
  superior to general purpose PCs when applied to cracking DES, the
  DESCHALL effort [CURT05][RSA1] aptly demonstrated that the idle
  cycles of everyday users' PCs could be efficiently applied to this
  problem.  As noted above, distributed.net teamed with the EFF group
  to solve the third RSA DES Challenge using a combination of PCs and
  the EFF's "Deep Crack" machine to find a DES key in 22 hours.  And
  that was using 1999 technologies.

  Clearly, PCs have improved dramatically since 1999.  At that time,
  state-of-the-art desktops ran at around 800MHz.  Today, desktop PCs
  commonly run at 3-4 times that speed, and supporting technologies
  (memory, cache, storage) offer far higher performance as well.  Since
  the distributed.net effort used a broad spectrum of computers (from
  early 1990s desktops to state-of-the-art (in 1999) multiprocessors,
  according to [DIST99]), it is difficult to do a direct comparison
  with today's technologies.  Still, we know that performance has, in
  general, followed the prediction of Moore's Law, so we should expect
  an improvement on the order of a factor of 8-16 by now, even with no
  algorithmic improvements

7.3.1.  Willing Participants

  It is important to note that the distributed.net efforts have relied
  upon willing participants.  That is, participants must explicitly and
  voluntarily join the effort.  It is equally important to note that
  only the idle cycles of the enrolled systems are used.  Depending on
  the way in which "idle" is defined, along with the user's habits and
  computing requirements, this could have a significant effect on the
  contribution level of a given system.

  These factors impose significant limitations in terms of scale.
  While distributed.net was able to enlist over 100,000 computers from
  around the world for the third RSA DES Challenge, this is actually a
  rather small number when compared to 2^56 (over 72 quadrillion)
  possible DES keys.  And when you consider the goal (i.e., to prove
  DES can be cracked), it seems reasonable to assume these same
  participants would not willingly offer up their compute cycles for a
  more nefarious use (like attacking the keys used to encrypt your
  online banking session).  Hence, this particular model does not
  appear to pose a significant threat to most uses of encryption today.
  However, below, we discuss a variation on this approach that does
  pose an immediate threat.




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7.3.2.  Spyware and Viruses and Botnets (oh my!)

  "Spyware" is a popular topic in security newsfeeds these days.  Most
  of these applications are intended to display context-sensitive
  advertisements to users, and some actually modify a user's web
  browsing experience, directing them to sites of the distributor's
  choice in an effort to generate revenue.  There are many names for
  this type of software, but for our purposes, we will refer to it
  simply as "spyware".  And while there are some instances in which
  rogue software actually does spy on hapless users and report things
  back to the issuer, we do not focus here on such distinctions.

  Indeed, what we are more interested in is the broader modality in
  which this software functions: it is typically installed without the
  explicit knowledge and/or understanding of the user, and typically
  runs without the user's knowledge, sometimes slowing the user's PC to
  a crawl.  One might note that such behavior seems quite surprising in
  view of the fact that displaying ads to users is actually a light-
  weight task, and wonder what this software is actually doing with all
  those compute cycles.

  Worms and viruses are also very interesting: like spyware, these are
  installed without the user's knowledge or consent, and they use the
  computer in ways the user would not voluntarily allow.  And unlike
  the spyware that is most common today, this malware usually contains
  explicit propagation technology by which it automatically spreads.
  It is not difficult to imagine where we are going with this: if you
  combine these techniques, forcible induction of user machines into an
  "army" of systems becomes possible.  This approach was alluded to in
  [CURT98] and, in fact, is being done today.

  Botnets [BOT05] represent a relatively recent phenomena.  Using
  various propagation techniques, malware is distributed across a range
  of systems, where it lies in wait for a trigger of some sort.  These
  "triggers" may be implemented through periodic polling of a
  centralized authority, the arrival of a particular date, or any of a
  large number of other events.  Upon triggering, the malware executes
  its task, which may involve participating in a Distributed Denial of
  Service (DDoS) attack, or some other type of activity.

  Criminal groups are currently renting out botnets for various uses
  [CERT01].  While reported occurrences have typically involved using
  these rogue networks for DDoS attacks, we would be naive to think
  other uses (e.g., breaking encryption keys) have not been considered.
  Botnets greatly mitigate the scaling problem faced by
  distributed.net: it is no longer a volunteer-only effort, and user
  activity no longer significantly impedes the application's progress.
  This should give us pause.



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  It is very important to clearly recognize the implications of this:
  botnets are cheap, and there are lots of PCs out there.  You don't
  need the $15,625 that we speculated would be enough to build a copy
  of the EFF system today -- you only need a commodity PC on which to
  develop the malware, and the requisite skills.  Or, you need access
  to someone with those things, and a relatively modest sum of cash.
  The game has changed dramatically.

8.  Why is DES Still Used?

  Obviously, DES is not secure by most measures -- why is it still used
  today?  There are probably many reasons, but here are perhaps the
  most common:

  o  Backward compatibility - Numerous deployed systems support DES,
     and rather than replace those systems, new systems are implemented
     with compatibility in mind.

  o  Performance - Many early VPN clients provided DES as the default
     cryptographic algorithm, because PCs of the day suffered a
     noticeable performance hit when applying stronger cryptography
     (e.g., 3DES).

  o  Ignorance - People simply do not understand that DES is no longer
     secure for most uses.

  While there are probably other reasons, these are the most frequently
  cited.

  Performance arguments are easily dispensed with today.  PCs have more
  than ample power to implement stronger cryptography with no
  noticeable performance impact, and for systems that are resource
  constrained, there are strong algorithms that are far better
  performers than DES (e.g., AES-128).  And while backward
  compatibility is sometimes a valid argument, this must be weighed
  carefully.  At the point where the risk is higher than the cost of
  replacement, legacy systems should be abandoned.

  With respect to the third reason (ignorance), this note attempts to
  address this, and we should continue to make every effort to get the
  word out.  DES is no longer secure for most uses, and it requires
  significant security expertise to evaluate those small number of
  cases in which it might be acceptable.  Technologies exist that put
  DES-cracking capability within reach of a modestly financed or
  modestly skilled motivated attacker.  There are stronger, cheaper,
  faster encryption algorithms available.  It is time to move on.





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9.  Security Considerations

  This entire document deals with security considerations.  Still, it
  makes sense to summarize a few key points here.  It should be clear
  by now that the DES algorithm offers little deterrence for a
  determined adversary.  While it might have cost $250,000 to build a
  dedicated DES cracker in 1998, nowadays it can be done for
  considerably less.  Indeed, botnets are arguably free, if you don't
  count the malware author's time in your cost computation.

  Does this mean DES should never be used?  Well, no - but it does mean
  that if it is used at all, it should be used with extreme care.  It
  is important to carefully evaluate the value of the information being
  protected, both to its owner and to an attacker, and to fully grasp
  the potential risks.  In some cases, DES may still provide an
  acceptable level of security, e.g., when you want to encrypt a file
  on the family PC, and there are no real threats in your household.

  However, it is important to recognize that, in such cases, DES is
  much like a cheap suitcase lock: it usually helps honest people
  remain honest, but it won't stop a determined thief.  Given that
  strong, more efficient cryptographic algorithms (e.g., AES) are
  available, it seems the only rational reason to continue using DES
  today is for compulsory backward compatibility.  In such cases, if
  there is no plan for gradually phasing out such products, then, as a
  security implementer, you can do the following:

  o  Recommend a phased upgrade approach.

  o  If possible, use 3DES rather than DES (and in any case, DO NOT
     make DES the default algorithm!).

  o  Replace keys before exceeding 2^32 blocks per key (to avoid
     various cryptanalytic attacks).

  o  If there is a user interface, make users aware of the fact that
     the cryptography in use is not strong, and for your particular
     application, make appropriate recommendations in this regard.

  The bottom line: it is simpler to not use this algorithm than it is
  to come up with narrow scenarios in which it might be okay.  If you
  have legacy systems relying on DES, it makes sense to begin phasing
  them out as soon as possible.








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10.  Acknowledgements

  The author gratefully acknowledges the contributions of Doug Whiting,
  Matt Curtin, Eric Rescorla, Bob Baldwin, and Yoav Nir.  Their
  reviews, comments, and advice immeasurably improved this note.  And
  of course, we all have the EFF and all those involved with the "Deep
  Crack", DESCHALL, and distributed.net efforts to thank for their
  pioneering research and implementations in this area.











































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Appendix A.  What About 3DES?

  It seems reasonable, given that we recommend avoiding DES, to ask:
  how about 3DES?  Is it still safe?  Thankfully, most of the
  discussion above does not apply to 3DES, and it is still "safe" in
  general.  Below, we briefly explain why this is true, and what
  caveats currently exist.

A.1.  Brute-Force Attacks on 3DES

  Recall that for DES there are 2^56 possible keys, and that a brute-
  force attack consists of trying each key until the right one is
  found.  Since we are equally likely to find the key on the first,
  second, or even last try, on average we expect to find the key after
  trying half (2^55) of the keys, or after 36,028,797,018,963,968
  decryptions.  This doesn't seem completely impossible given current
  processor speeds, and as we saw above, we can expect with today's
  technology that such an attack could almost certainly be carried out
  in around half a day.

  For a brute-force attack on 3DES, however, the outlook is far less
  optimistic.  Consider the problem: we know C (and possibly p), and we
  are trying to guess k1, k2, and k3 in the following relation:

                       C = E_k3(D_k2(E_k1(p)))

  In order to guess the keys, we must execute something like the
  following (assuming k1, k2, and k3 are 64-bit values, as are Ci and
  p):

          for ( k3 = 0 to 2^56 step 1 )
              compute C2 = D_k3(C1)
              for ( k2 = 0 to 2^56 step 1 )
                  compute C3 = E_k2(C2)
                  for ( k1 = 0 to 2^56 step 1 )
                      begin
                         compute p = D_k1(C3) xor IV
                         if ( p equals p-expected )
                              exit loop; we found the keys
                      end

  Note that in the worst case the correct key combination will be the
  last one we try, meaning we will have tried 2^168 crypto operations.
  If we assume that each 3DES decryption (2 decryptions plus one
  encryption) takes a single microsecond, this would amount to 1.19 x
  10^37 years.  That's FAR longer than scientists currently estimate
  our universe to have been in existence.




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  While it is important to note that we could slightly prune the key
  space by assuming that two equal keys would never be used (i.e., k1
  != k2, k2 != k3, k1 != k3), this does not result in a significant
  work reduction when you consider the magnitude of the numbers we're
  dealing with.  And what if we instead assumed that technological
  advances allow us to apply DES far more quickly?

  Today, commercial 3DES chips capable of 10-Gbps encryption are widely
  available, and this translates to 15,625,000 DES blocks per second.
  The estimate given above assumed 1,000,000 DES blocks/second, so
  10-Gbps hardware is 15 times as fast.  This means in the worst case
  it would take 7.6 x 10^35 years -- not much faster in the larger
  scheme of things.

  Even if we consider hardware that is 1,000,000 times faster, this
  would still require 7.6 x 10^29 years - still FAR longer than the
  universe has been around.  Obviously, we're getting nowhere fast
  here. 3DES, for all practical purposes, is probably safe from brute-
  force attacks for the foreseeable future.

A.2.  Cryptanalytic Attacks Against 3DES

  Unlike DES, there are only a few known cryptanalytic attacks against
  3DES.  Below, we describe those attacks that are currently discussed
  in the literature.

A.2.1.  Meet-In-The-Middle (MITM) Attacks

  The most commonly described 3DES attack is MITM, described in [HAC]
  and elsewhere.  It works like this: take a ciphertext value 'C' (with
  corresponding known plaintext value 'p'), and compute the values of
  Cx = D_kx(C) for all possible (2^56) keys.  Store each Cx,kx pair in
  a table indexed by Cx.

  Now, compute the values of Cy = D_ki(E_kj(p)) in a nested loop, as
  illustrated above in our brute-force exercise.  For each Cy, do a
  lookup on the table of Cx's.  For each match found, test the triple
  of keys.  It is important to note that a match does not imply you
  have the right keys - you must test this against additional
  ciphertext/plaintext pairs to be certain (~3 pairs for a strong
  measure of certainty with 3DES).  Ultimately, there will be exactly
  one correct key triplet.

  Note that computing the initial table of Cx,kx pairs requires 2^56
  encryptions and 2^56 blocks of storage (about 576 gigabytes).
  Computing the lookup elements requires at most 2^112 cryptographic





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  operations (table lookups are negligible by comparison), and 2^111
  operations on average.  Lucks [LUCKS] has come up with optimizations
  that reduce this to about 2^108.

  3DES, even at a strength of 2^108, is still very strong.  If we use
  our brute-force limits from above (15,625,000 blocks per second),
  this attack will take on the order of 6.586 x 10^17 years to carry
  out.  Make the machine 1 million times faster, and you still need
  more than 658 BILLION years.  We are probably safe from MITM attacks
  on 3DES for the foreseeable future.

A.2.2.  Related Key Attacks

  For a detailed description of related key attacks against 3DES (and
  other algorithms), see [KELSEY].  In a nutshell, for this approach
  the attacker knows the encryption of given plaintext under the
  original key K, and some related keys K'_i.  There are attacks where
  the attacker chooses how the key is to be changed, and attacks in
  which the difference is known, but not controlled, by the attacker.

  Here's how it works.  Assume the following cryptographic relation:

                       C = E_k3(D_k2(E_k1(p)))

  Then, the following defines the key relation:

                   K = (k1,k2,k3) and K' = (k1 + d,k2,k3)

  with d being a fixed constant.  Knowing p and C, we need to decrypt C
  under K' as follows:

                   Let kx = k1 + d (note: '+' represents xor)

                             and

                       p' = D_kx(E_k1(p))

  Once we have p', we can find kx by exhaustively trying each key until
  we find a match (2^56 encryptions, worst case).  Once we find kx, we
  can conduct a double-DES MITM attack to find k2 and k3, which
  requires between 2^56 and 2^72 trial offline encryptions.

  From a practical standpoint, it's very important to recognize the
  "what-if" nature of this attack: the adversary must know the
  plaintext/ciphertext pair, he must be able to influence a subsequent
  encryption key in a highly controlled fashion (or at least, know





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  exactly how the key changes), and then have the cryptographic
  cooperation required to compute p'.  This is clearly a very difficult
  attack in the real world.

A.3.  3DES Block Size

  While the effective key length for 3DES is clearly much larger than
  for DES, the block size is, unfortunately, still only 64 bits.  For
  CBC mode (the most commonly deployed mode in Internet security
  protocols), this means that, due to the birthday paradox, information
  about the plaintext begins to leak after around 2^32 blocks have been
  encrypted.  For this reason, 3DES may not be the best choice for
  high-throughput links, or other high-density encryption applications.
  At minimum, care should be taken to refresh keys frequently enough to
  minimize ciphertext collisions in such scenarios.

Informative References

  [AES]      "The Advanced Encryption Standard", November 2001,
             <http://csrc.nist.gov/publications/fips/fips197/
             fips-197.pdf>.

  [AES-NSA]  "CNSS Policy No. 15, Fact Sheet No. 1", June 2003,
             <http://csrc.nist.gov/cryptval/CNSS15FS.pdf>.

  [BIH93]    Biham, E. and A. Shamir, "Differential Cryptanalysis of
             the Data Encryption Standard", 1993.

  [BIH96]    Biham, E., "How to Forge DES-Encrypted Messages in 2^28
             Steps", 1996.

  [BIH96-2]  Biham, E. and A. Shamir, "A New Cryptanalytic Attack on
             DES", 1996.

  [BLAZ96]   Blaze, M., Diffie, W., Rivest, R., Schneier, B.,
             Shimomura, T., Thompson, E., and M. Wiener, "Minimal Key
             Lengths for Symmetric Ciphers to Provide Adequate
             Commercial Security", January 1996.

  [BOT05]    "Know Your Enemy: Tracking Botnets", March 2005,
             <http://www.honeynet.org/papers/bots/>.

  [CERT01]   Ianelli, N. and A. Hackworth, "Botnets as a Vehicle for
             Online Crime", December 2005,
             <http://www.cert.org/archive/pdb/Botnets.pdf>.

  [CURT05]   Curtin, M., "Brute Force: Cracking the Data Encryption
             Standard", 2005.



Kelly                        Informational                     [Page 25]

RFC 4772               DES Security Implications           December 2006


  [CURT98]   Curtin, M. and J. Dolske, "A Brute Force Search of DES
             Keyspace", 1998,
             <http://www.interhack.net/pubs/des-key-crack/>.

  [DES]      "Data Encryption Standard", January 1977,
             <http://www.nist.gov>.

  [DH77]     Hellman, M. and W. Diffie, "Exhaustive Cryptanalysis of
             the NBS Data Encryption Standard", June 1977.

  [DIST99]   Press Release, distributed., "US GOVERNMENT'S ENCRYPTION
             STANDARD BROKEN IN LESS THAN A DAY", 1999,
             <http://www1.distributed.net/des/release-desiii.txt>.

  [EFF98]    EFF, "Cracking DES", July 1998.

  [FBI01]    "NIPC Advisory 01-003", March 2001,
             <http://www.fbi.gov/pressrel/pressrel01/nipc030801.htm>.

  [FBI06]    "FBI Webpage: Focus on Economic Espionage", January 2006,
             <http://www.fbi.gov/hq/ci/economic.htm>.

  [FERG03]   Ferguson, N. and B. Schneier, "Practical Cryptography",
             2003.

  [FPL02]    Koeune, F., Rouvroy, G., Standaert, F., Quisquater, J.,
             David, J., and J. Legat, "An FPGA Implementation of the
             Linear Cryptanalysis", FPL 2002, Volume 2438 of Lecture
             Notes in Computer Science, pages 846-852, Spriger-Verlag,
             September 2002.

  [HAC]      Menezes, A., van Oorschot, P., and S. Vanstone, "Handbook
             of Applied Cryptography", 1997.

  [JAK97]    Jakobsen, T. and L. Knudsen, "The Interpolation Attack on
             Block Ciphers", 1997.

  [KELSEY]   Kelsey, J., Schneier, B., and D. Wagner, "Key-Schedule
             Cryptanalysis of 3-WAY, IDEA, G-DES, RC4, SAFER, and
             Triple-DES", 1996.

  [LUCKS]    Lucks, S., "Attacking Triple Encryption", 1998.

  [MAT93]    Matsui, M., "Linear Cryptanalysis Method for DES Cipher",
             1993.

  [NIST-TP]  "DES Transition Plan", May 2005,
             <http://csrc.nist.gov/cryptval/DESTranPlan.pdf>.



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RFC 4772               DES Security Implications           December 2006


  [NYSE1]    "Extreme availability: New York Stock Exchange's new IT
             infrastructure puts hand-held wireless terminals in
             brokers' hands.", June 2005.

  [RSA1]     Press Release, RSA., "Team of Universities, Companies and
             Individual Computer Users Linked Over the Internet Crack
             RSA's 56-Bit DES Challenge", 1997, <http://
             www.rsasecurity.com/press_release.asp?doc_id=661&id=1034>.

  [RSA2]     Press Release, RSA., "RSA to Launch "DES Challenge II" at
             Data Security Conference", 1998, <http://
             www.rsasecurity.com/press_release.asp?doc_id=729&id=1034>.

  [RSA3]     Press Release, RSA., "Distributed Team Collaborates to
             Solve Secret-Key Challenge", 1998, <http://
             www.rsasecurity.com/press_release.asp?doc_id=558&id=1034>.

  [RSA4]     Press Release, RSA., "RSA to Launch DES Challenge III
             Contest at 1999 Data Security Conference", 1998, <http://
             www.rsasecurity.com/press_release.asp?doc_id=627&id=1034>.

  [RSA5]     Press Release, RSA., "RSA Code-Breaking Contest Again Won
             by Distributed.Net and Electronic Frontier Foundation",
             1999, <http://www.rsasecurity.com/
             press_release.asp?doc_id=462&id=1034>.

  [SCHN96]   Schneier, B., "Applied Cryptography, Second Ed.", 1996.

  [VA1]      "Review of Issues Related to the Loss of VA Information
             Involving the Identities of Millions of Veterans (Report
             #06-02238-163)", July 2006, <http://www.va.gov/oig/51/
             FY2006rpts/VAOIG-06-02238-163.pdf>.

  [WIEN94]   Wiener, M., "Efficient DES Key Search", August 1993.

Author's Address

  Scott G. Kelly
  Aruba Networks
  1322 Crossman Ave
  Sunnyvale, CA  94089
  US

  EMail: [email protected]







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RFC 4772               DES Security Implications           December 2006


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