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"One should not assume that stakeholders do not care about their security merely because they do not understand the consequences of certain actions. The perception of risk can vary significantly from actual risk and, in the short term, convenience may lead some early adopters to make hazardous decisions."
SecurIST, “D3.3 – ICT Security & Dependability Research beyond 2010: Final Strategy”, January 2007 -
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“The software security industry today is at about the same stage as the auto industry was in 1930" ... "it looks fast, goes nice but in an accident you die.” ... "The major shortfall is absence of assurance (or safety) mechanisms in software. If my car crashed as often as my computer does, I would be dead by now."
Brian Snow, Former Technical Director of the US National Security Agency (NSA), "We need assurance!", 1999-2008
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"The future ability of quantum computers might be a decade or two away, their future ability to break public-key cryptography has important implications for the encryption of highly sensitive information today. For these applications, we must already design new public-key cryptosystems and one-way functions that are immune to quantum cryptanalysis."
ARDA, Report of the Quantum Information Science and Technology Experts Panel, 2004

| Synaptic VEST cipher-hash Overview |
OverviewWhat does VEST do?VEST is the world's first and only known family of 160-bit to 512-bit symmetric key cryptosystems targeted by Synaptic from its conception solely for semiconductor and multi-factor hardware authentication applications.
"A Lightweight Hardware Implementation of the Stream Cipher VEST-4"
Timo Gendrullis, Timo Kasper, and Christof Paar VEST ciphers offer a wide range of functions including single-pass authenticated encryption (privacy with integrated message authentication) and cryptographic hashing operations. What problem does VEST solve?VEST is the result of Synaptic Labs' three year security project that set out to design a post quantum secure cipher capable of achieving 10 gigabit/s authenticated encryption with low power in FPGA based chip-to-chip and networking applications. The project required maximum efficiency in semiconductor applications. The VEST design solves several problems:
Previously, secure on-chip cryptosystems were not commercially viable for the vast majority of commodity semiconductor products. The need to combine different modules and associated chip resource demands with increased implementation complexity to create a specific on-chip cryptosystem were added costs and risks that many products could not accept. Synaptic Labs' VEST cipher addresses these market needs by designing a cipher from first principles specifically for semiconductor applications. What environments is VEST intended for?VEST is intended for semiconductor applications. The combinatorial logic of the cipher design is optimised for efficient operation on 4-to-1 and 6-to-1 look-up-table architectures. Having achieved this VEST is also efficient on standard-cell ASIC architectures. Due to the bit-level addressing of the VEST cipher scheme, VEST is approximately 1000x times slower per clock cycle in software than in hardware. This design feature supports detection of software-emulation of VEST challenge responses. This is useful in identification and access control applications such as cable-TV environments. What applications is VEST intended for?VEST is ideal for:
Examples include:
What advantages does VEST have over the nearest competition?Synaptic Labs' VEST cryptosystem has several advantages over standards based solutions:
What other components are required to make a complete system?The typical online cryptographic system designed to enable secure communications between two users requires a privacy primitive (block cipher or stream cipher), a cryptographic hash function, a key exchange algorithm and may also use a digital signature algorithm. The VEST algorithm is designed to perform privacy operations (stream cipher), cryptographic hash operations, to be used within the Synaptic key exchange algorithms, and for use in the Lamport-Diffie-Merkle digital signature algorithms. Was VEST submitted to any cryptographic competitions?Yes. The first version of VEST was originally submitted to ECRYPT – the European Network of Excellence for Cryptology eSTREAM stream cipher competition in April 2005. The VEST (P2.0) cipher specifications were published on ECRYPT in September 2006. On the 19th of January 2007 a single-digit typographic error correction was published on ECRYPT for the VEST P2.0 cipher. On the 31st of January 2007 cryptanalysis against uncorrected cipher, "Overtaking VEST" was published by Joux and Reinhard at SASC 2007. On the 12th of March Gittins and Landman performed a formal analysis of typographic correction and published the VEST P2.1 specifications. On the 26th of March 2007 the authors of the attack paper Joux and Reinhard publish their acknowledgment that the correction of 19th of January 2007 removes all attacks. On the same day there is an official Publication stating VEST was not accepted into the final Phase of eSTREAM due to the Joux-Reinhard attack. In April 2007 eSTREAM acknowledged that the correction of 19 January 2007 removes the Joux-Reinhard attacks. There are no published attacks on the VEST Version 2.1 specifications as of Q1 2009. Was VEST submitted to the NIST SHA-3 competition?No. The NIST SHA-3 competition is intended to search for a royalty free replacement for SHA-2. The SHA-3 competition is targeted to the design of hash functions that software efficient on 64-bit general purpose computers. For these reasons we assessed this was not the most appropriate venue to submit VEST. |
| Last Updated on Sunday, 23 October 2011 09:43 |


