On Mon, 30 May 2005, Werner Koch wrote:

On Fri, 27 May 2005 10:53:04 -0400 (EDT), Atom Smasher said:

DSA being "The Standard" i don't think it's any more standard than RSA, although it is more common.

DSS (DSA+SHA1) is the FIPS standard for digital signatures.
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DSA is "a" standard, but by no means "the" standard.


the common and widespread use of DSA instead of RSA for signatures

No. DSA has a couple of advantages of RSA: It is a different algorithm using another problem than RSA and the signatures creates are much smaller than RSA signatures.
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i suspect that DSA would not have been pushed along nearly as far as it has if not for the patent on RSA. of course, if they wait much longer before updating DSA to officially support larger keys and hashes we'll start seeing more and more use of RSA with larger keys and hashes... if that happens, DSA will become a much less relevant standard.


--
        ...atom

 _________________________________________
 PGP key - http://atom.smasher.org/pgp.txt
 762A 3B98 A3C3 96C9 C6B7 582A B88D 52E4 D9F5 7808
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        "Juridically they are both equal [the worker and capitalist];
         but economically the worker is the serf of the capitalist...
         thereby the worker sells his person and his liberty for a
         given time. The worker is in the position of a serf because
         this terrible threat of starvation which daily hangs over
         his head and over his family, will force him to accept any
         conditions imposed by the gainful calculations of the
         capitalist, the industrialist, the employer... The worker
         always has the right to leave his employer, but has he the
         means to do so? No, he does it in order to sell himself to
         another employer. He is driven to it by the same hunger
         which forces him to sell himself to the first employer. Thus
         the worker's liberty... is only a theoretical freedom,
         lacking any means for its possible realization, and
         consequently it is only a fictitious liberty, an utter
         falsehood. The truth is that the whole life of the worker
         is simply a continuous and dismaying succession of terms of
         serfdom -- voluntary from the juridical point of view but
         compulsory from an economic sense -- broken up by momentarily
         brief interludes of freedom accompanied by starvation; in
         other words, it is real slavery."
                -- Mikhail Bakunin



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