MFPA wrote:
> On Monday 23 January 2012 at 12:47:03 AM, in
> , brian m. carlson
> wrote:
> > This is not a problem with OpenPGP because the attacker
> > never gets to see the value encrypted with RSA because
> > it's the symmetric key.
>
> Isn't that the same thing as the session key, which can be
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA512
Hi
On Monday 23 January 2012 at 12:47:03 AM, in
, brian m. carlson
wrote:
> This is not a problem with OpenPGP because the attacker
> never gets to see the value encrypted with RSA because
> it's the symmetric key.
Isn't that the same thing as t
- User brian m. carlson on 2012-01-23 00:47:03 wrote:
>> * sending ciphertext with the same "e" to several recipients
>This depends on a small message. All secure padding schemes avoid this
>problem because the pad the message so it is not small.
>> * no randomness
>All secure padding schemes
On Sun, Jan 22, 2012 at 11:29:54PM +0400, Sergey Matveev wrote:
> >If the standard allowed different padding schemes, then all
> >implementations would have to support multiple padding schemes, which
> >would be burdensome without providing significantly more security.
> Hmm, I see. However does it
- User brian m. carlson on 2012-01-22 18:54:22 wrote:
>GnuPG uses PKCS #1 v1.5. This is specified in RFC 4880.
>You cannot choose a different padding scheme and remain in compliance
>with the OpenPGP standard.
Ah! I see. Thank you! Now I understand.
>If the standard allowed different padding
On Sun, Jan 22, 2012 at 07:48:28PM +0400, Sergey Matveev wrote:
> As I understand, such asymmetric ciphers as RSA and/or ElGamal requires
> strong padding applied before "message" is encrypted. Message is of
> course the one-time session key, used to encipher the actual data.
To use them correctly
Greetings everyone!
As I understand, such asymmetric ciphers as RSA and/or ElGamal requires
strong padding applied before "message" is encrypted. Message is of
course the one-time session key, used to encipher the actual data.
There are different versions of PKCS#1, NESSIE, OAEP and other schemes