Home
'Rijndael' proposed as government encryption standard
By webmaster Wed Jan 10, 2001 06:38 AM
From ZDNET: The National Institute of Standards and Technology announced last week that Rijndael, an algorithm developed by Belgian scientists, won its contest to find a highly secure encryption technology for the future. NIST will now propose the Rijndael (pronounced RHINE-doll) specification as a government standard.
...
But Rijndael was also chosen for its portability -- it takes only bytes of RAM and doesn't suffer significant performance degradation in limited memory environments, officials said. In short, it appears tailor-made for the exploding handheld and wireless computing markets.
(more )
|
Home
Words of Warning from a Cyber-Security Guru
By webmaster Sun Feb 06, 2000 09:37 PM
BusinessWeek Online interviews Bruce Schneier:
Bruce Schneier of Counterpane Internet Security says computing today is unsafe at any speed. But we can minimize the dangers.
Given this background, it's intriguing to find Schneier, in recent issues of Crypto-gram, expounding on the limitations of math-based cryptography. "In my book, I wrote that we needed to protect ourselves not with laws, but with mathematics," he says. "It was interesting, but incredibly naive." Now Schneier, the inventor of the popular encryption algorithm called "Blowfish," believes that such schemes will never be sufficient. Instead, his efforts focus on dealing with complexity, which he sees as the root cause of security vulnerabilities.
(1 reply )
|
Links Official Twofish Site
The official site for twofish. Lots of information, links, and access to the source code.
|
Links The Twofish Encryption Algorithm: Block encryption for the 21st century
Bruce Schneier's account of the Twofish encryption algorithm in Dr. Dobb's journal. Highly readable for the lay person.
|