Chuck Pareto wrote:
> I'm not sure what you mean by "shouldn't be using public-key
> encryption", why?
Because you don't understand its properties, so there's no way you can know
whether or not it meets your security requirements.
> It seems like .Net sets up a nice class that is easily
> impl
Hi Phillip,
I'm not sure what you mean by "shouldn't be using public-key encryption",
why?
It seems like .Net sets up a nice class that is easily implemented, all I
need is the key and the exponent and I can encrypt and decrypt when needed.
I don't think I really have a choice about what to use, I
On Thu, May 27, 2010 at 2:20 PM, Chuck Pareto wrote:
> Hi,
> I'm still unsure as to the max length string I can use to encrypt. I'm using
> the rsacrypto class in .net to encrypt.
> I know I can't pass in a string that's 256 bytes long or greater because
> there us an exception that gets thrown. B
> From: owner-openssl-us...@openssl.org On Behalf Of Chuck Pareto
> Sent: Thursday, 27 May, 2010 16:20
> I'm still unsure as to the max length string I can use to
> encrypt. I'm
> using the rsacrypto class in .net to encrypt.
> I know I can't pass in a string that's 256 bytes long or greater
Hi,
I'm still unsure as to the max length string I can use to encrypt. I'm
using the rsacrypto class in .net to encrypt.
I know I can't pass in a string that's 256 bytes long or greater
because there us an exception that gets thrown. But as I work my way
back in length I still get exceptions
Chuck Pareto wrote:
> if my public key is 256 bytes long, what is the max length
> of the string I can use to encrypt? Is it 256?
If the output is exactly 256 bytes, there are (in theory) 2^(256*8) possible
outputs. That means there can be at most 2^(256*8) possible inputs. There
are more than
if my public key is 256 bytes long, what is the max length of the string I
can use to encrypt? Is it 256?