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Authentication and Hash Function

Message authentication aims to validate identity, integrity, and non-repudiation. It can be achieved through message encryption, message authentication codes (MACs), or hash functions. MACs generate a cryptographic checksum that depends on the message and key, providing assurance of integrity and source. Hash functions condense messages into fixed-length hashes, and are commonly used with digital signatures. Both MACs and hash functions must be resistant to preimage and collision attacks to ensure security.

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Junaid Malik
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
19 views

Authentication and Hash Function

Message authentication aims to validate identity, integrity, and non-repudiation. It can be achieved through message encryption, message authentication codes (MACs), or hash functions. MACs generate a cryptographic checksum that depends on the message and key, providing assurance of integrity and source. Hash functions condense messages into fixed-length hashes, and are commonly used with digital signatures. Both MACs and hash functions must be resistant to preimage and collision attacks to ensure security.

Uploaded by

Junaid Malik
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Authentication and

Hash Functions
Message Authentication
 message authentication is concerned with:
 protecting the integrity of a message
 validating identity of originator
 non-repudiation of origin (dispute resolution)
 will consider the security requirements
 then three alternative functions used:
 message encryption
 message authentication code (MAC)
 hash function
Security Requirements
 disclosure
 traffic analysis
 masquerade
 content modification
 sequence modification
 source repudiation
 destination repudiation
Message Encryption
 message encryption by itself also provides
a measure of authentication
 if symmetric encryption is used then:
 receiver know sender must have created it
 since only sender and receiver now key used
 know content cannot of been altered
 if message has suitable structure, redundancy
or a checksum to detect any changes
Message Encryption
 if public-key encryption is used:
 encryption provides no confidence of sender
 since anyone potentially knows public-key
 however if
• sender signs message using their private-key
• then encrypts with recipients public key
• have both secrecy and authentication
 again need to recognize corrupted messages
 but at cost of two public-key uses on message
Message Authentication Code
(MAC)
 generated by an algorithm that creates a
small fixed-sized block
 depending on both message and some key
 like encryption though need not be reversible
 appended to message as a signature
 receiver performs same computation on
message and checks it matches the MAC
 provides assurance that message is
unaltered and comes from sender
Message Authentication Code
Message Authentication
Codes
 as shown the MAC provides authentication
 can also use encryption for secrecy
 generally use separate keys for each
 can compute MAC either before or after encryption
 is generally regarded as better done before
 why use a MAC?
 sometimes only authentication is needed
 sometimes need authentication to persist longer than
the encryption.
 note that a MAC is not a digital signature
MAC Properties
 a MAC is a cryptographic checksum
MAC = CK(M)
 condenses a variable-length message M
 using a secret key K
 to a fixed-sized authenticator
 is a many-to-one function
 potentially many messages have same MAC
 but finding these needs to be very difficult
Requirements for MACs
 taking into account the types of attacks
 need the MAC to satisfy the following:
1. knowing a message and MAC, is infeasible
to find another message with same MAC
2. MACs should be uniformly distributed
3. MAC should depend equally on all bits of the
message
Using Symmetric Ciphers for
MACs
 can use any block cipher chaining mode
and use final block as a MAC
 Data Authentication Algorithm (DAA) is
a widely used MAC based on DES-CBC
 using IV=0 and zero-pad of final block
 encrypt message using DES in CBC mode
 and send just the final block as the MAC
• or the leftmost M bits (16≤M≤64) of final block
 but final MAC is now too small for security
Data Authentication Algorithm
Hash Functions
 condenses arbitrary message to fixed size
h = H(M)
 usually assume that the hash function is
public and not keyed
 cf. MAC which is keyed
 hash used to detect changes to message
 can use in various ways with message
 most often to create a digital signature
Requirements for Hash
Functions
1. can be applied to any sized message M
2. produces fixed-length output h
3. is easy to compute h=H(M) for any message M
4. given h is infeasible to find x s.t. H(x)=h
• one-way property
5. given x is infeasible to find y s.t. H(y)=H(x)
• weak collision resistance
6. is infeasible to find any x,y s.t. H(y)=H(x)
• strong collision resistance
Simple Hash Functions
 are several proposals for simple functions
 based on XOR of message blocks
 not secure since can manipulate any
message and either not change hash or
change hash also
 need a stronger cryptographic function
(next chapter)
Block Ciphers as Hash
Functions
 can use block ciphers as hash functions
 using H0=0 and zero-pad of final block
 compute: Hi = EMi [Hi-1]
 and use final block as the hash value
 similar to CBC but without a key
 resulting hash is too small (64-bit)
 both due to direct birthday attack
 and to “meet-in-the-middle” attack
 other variants also susceptible to attack
Hash Functions & MAC
Security
 like block ciphers have:
 brute-force attacks exploiting
m/

strong collision resistance hash have cost 2 2

• have proposal for h/w MD5 cracker


• 128-bit hash looks vulnerable, 160-bits better
 MACs with known message-MAC pairs
• can either attack keyspace (cf key search) or MAC
• at least 128-bit MAC is needed for security
Hash Functions & MAC
Security
 cryptanalytic attacks exploit structure
 like block ciphers want brute-force attacks to be the
best alternative
 have a number of analytic attacks on iterated
hash functions
 typically focus on collisions in function f
 like block ciphers is often composed of rounds
 attacks exploit properties of round functions
Summary
 have considered:
 message authentication using
 message encryption
 MACs
 hash functions
 general approach & security

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