Open AccessProceedings Article
Integral Cryptanalysis
Lars R. Knudsen,David Wagner +1 more
- 04 Feb 2002
pp 112-127
503
TL;DR: This paper considers a cryptanalytic approach called integral cryptanalysis, which can be seen as a dual to differential cryptanalysis and applies to ciphers not vulnerable to differential attacks.
read more
Abstract: This paper considers a cryptanalytic approach called integral cryptanalysis. It can be seen as a dual to differential cryptanalysis and applies to ciphers not vulnerable to differential attacks. The method is particularlyapplicable to block ciphers which use bijective components only.
read more
Chat with Paper
AI Agents for this Paper
Find similar papers on Google Scholar, PubMed and Arxiv
Write a critical review of this paper
Analyze citations of this paper to find unaddressed research gaps
Citations
PRESENT: An Ultra-Lightweight Block Cipher
Andrey Bogdanov,Lars R. Knudsen,Gregor Leander,Christof Paar,Axel Poschmann,Matthew Robshaw,Yannick Seurin,C. Vikkelsoe +7 more
- 10 Sep 2007
TL;DR: An ultra-lightweight block cipher, present, which is competitive with today's leading compact stream ciphers and suitable for extremely constrained environments such as RFID tags and sensor networks.
•Journal Article
PRESENT: An Ultra-Lightweight Block Cipher
Andrey Bogdanov,Lars R. Knudsen,Gregor Leander,Christof Paar,Axel Poschmann,Matthew Robshaw,Yannick Seurin,C. Vikkelsoe +7 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors describe an ultra-lightweight block cipher, present, which is suitable for extremely constrained environments such as RFID tags and sensor networks, but it is not suitable for very large networks such as sensor networks.
1.7K
The SKINNY Family of Block Ciphers and Its Low-Latency Variant MANTIS
Christof Beierle,Jérémy Jean,Stefan Kölbl,Gregor Leander,Amir Moradi,Thomas Peyrin,Yu Sasaki,Pascal Sasdrich,Siang Meng Sim +8 more
- 14 Aug 2016
TL;DR: A new tweakable block cipher family SKINNY is presented, whose goal is to compete with NSA recent design SIMON in terms of hardware/software performances, while proving in addition much stronger security guarantees with regards to differential/linear attacks.
LBlock: a lightweight block cipher
Wenling Wu,Lei Zhang +1 more
- 07 Jun 2011
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors proposed a new lightweight block cipher called LBlock, which can achieve enough security margin against known attacks, such as differential cryptanalysis, linear cryptanalysis and related-key attacks.
KLEIN: a new family of lightweight block ciphers
Zheng Gong,Svetla Nikova,Yee Wei Law +2 more
- 26 Jun 2011
TL;DR: A new family of lightweight block ciphers named KLEIN is described, which is designed for resource-constrained devices such as wireless sensors and RFID tags, and has advantage in the software performance on legacy sensor platforms, while its hardware implementation can be compact as well.
References
•Book
Differential Cryptanalysis of the Data Encryption Standard
Eli Biham,Adi Shamir +1 more
- 01 Jan 1993
TL;DR: This book introduces a new cryptographic method, called differential cryptanalysis, which can be applied to analyze cryptosystems, and describes the cryptanalysis of DES, deals with the influence of its building blocks on security, and analyzes modified variants.
1.1K
Advances in Cryptology — EUROCRYPT ’99
Jacques Stern
- 01 Jan 1999
TL;DR: This work shows that if the private exponent d used in the RSA public-key cryptosystem is less than N then the system is insecure.
972
Truncated and higher order differentials
Lars R. Knudsen
- 14 Dec 1994
TL;DR: The concept of truncated differentials is introduced and it is shown how to find a minimum nonlinear order of a block cipher using higher order differentials.
The Block Cipher Square
Joan Daemen,Lars R. Knudsen,Vincent Rijmen +2 more
- 20 Jan 1997
TL;DR: A new 128-bit block cipher called Square, which concentrates on the resistance against differential and linear cryptanalysis, and the publication of the resulting cipher for public scrutiny is published.
Cryptanalysis of Skipjack reduced to 31 rounds using impossible differentials
Eli Biham,Alex Biryukov,Adi Shamir +2 more
- 02 May 1999
TL;DR: A new cryptanalytic technique, based on impossible differentials, is presented, and it is shown that Skipjack reduced from 32 to 31 rounds can be broken by an attack which is faster than exhaustive search.
Related Papers (5)
Joan Daemen,Lars R. Knudsen,Vincent Rijmen +2 more
- 20 Jan 1997
Mitsuru Matsui
- 02 Jan 1994
Eli Biham,Adi Shamir +1 more
- 11 Aug 1990
Lars R. Knudsen
- 14 Dec 1994