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  2. Padding (cryptography) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Padding_(cryptography)

    A modern form of padding for asymmetric primitives is OAEP applied to the RSA algorithm, when it is used to encrypt a limited number of bytes. The operation is referred to as "padding" because originally, random material was simply appended to the message to make it long enough for the primitive.

  3. Optimal asymmetric encryption padding - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Optimal_asymmetric...

    Add an element of randomness which can be used to convert a deterministic encryption scheme (e.g., traditional RSA) into a probabilistic scheme. Prevent partial decryption of ciphertexts (or other information leakage) by ensuring that an adversary cannot recover any portion of the plaintext without being able to invert the trapdoor one-way ...

  4. Coppersmith's attack - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coppersmith's_attack

    The public key in the RSA system is a tuple of integers (,), where N is the product of two primes p and q.The secret key is given by an integer d satisfying (() ()); equivalently, the secret key may be given by () and () if the Chinese remainder theorem is used to improve the speed of decryption, see CRT-RSA.

  5. PKCS 1 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PKCS_1

    The RSA public key is represented as the tuple (,), where the integer e is the public exponent. The RSA private key may have two representations. The first compact form is the tuple ( n , d ) {\displaystyle (n,d)} , where d is the private exponent.

  6. Encryption - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Encryption

    Traffic analysis is a broad class of techniques that often employs message lengths to infer sensitive implementation about traffic flows by aggregating information about a large number of messages. Padding a message's payload before encrypting it can help obscure the cleartext's true length, at the cost of increasing the ciphertext's size and ...

  7. Mask generation function - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mask_generation_function

    Mask generation functions, as generalizations of hash functions, are useful wherever hash functions are. However, use of a MGF is desirable in cases where a fixed-size hash would be inadequate. Examples include generating padding, producing one-time pads or keystreams in symmetric-key encryption, and yielding outputs for pseudorandom number ...

  8. AES implementations - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/AES_implementations

    The authors of Rijndael used to provide a homepage [2] for the algorithm. Care should be taken when implementing AES in software, in particular around side-channel attacks. The algorithm operates on plaintext blocks of 16 bytes. Encryption of shorter blocks is possible only by padding the source bytes, usually with null bytes. This can be ...

  9. Padding oracle attack - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Padding_oracle_attack

    The attack relies on having a "padding oracle" who freely responds to queries about whether a message is correctly padded or not. The information could be directly given, or leaked through a side-channel. The earliest well-known attack that uses a padding oracle is Bleichenbacher's attack of 1998, which attacks RSA with PKCS #1 v1.5 padding. [1]