• Title/Summary/Keyword: RSA Key Recovery

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Key Recovery Algorithm of Erroneous RSA Private Key Bits Using Generalized Probabilistic Measure (일반화된 확률 측도를 이용하여 에러가 있는 RSA 개인키를 복구하는 알고리즘)

  • Baek, Yoo-Jin
    • Journal of the Korea Institute of Information Security & Cryptology
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    • v.26 no.5
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    • pp.1089-1097
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    • 2016
  • It is well-known that, if additional information other than a plaintext-ciphertext pair is available, breaking the RSA cryptosystem may be much easier than factorizing the RSA modulus. For example, Coppersmith showed that, given the 1/2 fraction of the least or most significant bits of one of two RSA primes, the RSA modulus can be factorized in a polynomial time. More recently, Henecka et. al showed that the RSA private key of the form (p, q, d, $d_p$, $d_q$) can efficiently be recovered whenever the bits of the private key are erroneous with error rate less than 23.7%. It is notable that their algorithm is based on counting the matching bits between the candidate key bit string and the given decayed RSA private key bit string. And, extending the algorithm, this paper proposes a new RSA private key recovery algorithm using a generalized probabilistic measure for measuring the consistency between the candidate key bits and the given decayed RSA private key bits.

Recovering RSA Private Key Bits from Erasures and Errors (삭제와 오류로부터 RSA 개인키를 복구하는 알고리즘)

  • Baek, Yoo-Jin
    • Journal of the Korea Institute of Information Security & Cryptology
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    • v.27 no.4
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    • pp.951-959
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    • 2017
  • Under the assumption that there is available some additional information other than plaintext-ciphertext pairs, the security of the RSA cryptosystem has been analyzed by the attack methods such as the side-channel attacks and the lattice-based attacks. Recently, based on the data retention property of the powered-off DRAMs, the so called cold boot attack was proposed in the literature, which is focusing on recovering the various cryptosystems' key from some auxiliary information. This paper is dealing with the problem of recovering the RSA private key with erasures and errors and proposes a new key recovery algorithm which is shown to have better performance than the previous one introduced by Kunihiro et al.

On Recovering Erased RSA Private Key Bits

  • Baek, Yoo-Jin
    • International Journal of Internet, Broadcasting and Communication
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    • v.10 no.3
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    • pp.11-25
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    • 2018
  • While being believed that decrypting any RSA ciphertext is as hard as factorizing the RSA modulus, it was also shown that, if additional information is available, breaking the RSA cryptosystem may be much easier than factoring. For example, Coppersmith showed that, given the 1/2 fraction of the least or the most significant bits of one of two RSA primes, one can factorize the RSA modulus very efficiently, using the lattice-based technique. More recently, introducing the so called cold boot attack, Halderman et al. showed that one can recover cryptographic keys from a decayed DRAM image. And, following up this result, Heninger and Shacham presented a polynomial-time attack which, given 0.27-fraction of the RSA private key of the form (p, q, d, $d_p$, $d_q$), can recover the whole key, provided that the given bits are uniformly distributed. And, based on the work of Heninger and Shacham, this paper presents a different approach for recovering RSA private key bits from decayed key information, under the assumption that some random portion of the private key bits is known. More precisely, we present the algorithm of recovering RSA private key bits from erased key material and elaborate the formula of describing the number of partially-recovered RSA private key candidates in terms of the given erasure rate. Then, the result is justified by some extensive experiments.

On Design of the Recoverable Cryptosystem in Public Key Infrastructure (PKI 연동 키복구 암호 시스템 설계에 관한 연구)

  • 최희봉;오수현;홍순좌;원동호
    • Journal of the Korea Institute of Information Security & Cryptology
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    • v.12 no.1
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    • pp.11-20
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    • 2002
  • In 1998, A. Young and M. Yung proposed the auto-recovery auto-certificate cryptosystem in public key infrastructure. We propose the new recoverable cryptosystem in public key infrastructure which is designed with the concept of A. Young et al's auto-recovery auto-certificate cryptosystem. It has the private/public key pairs of the user and the master private/public key pairs of the escrow authority. It is based on RSA cryptosystem and has efficiency and security.

A Study on the Secure Global Key Recovery System (안전한 글로벌 키복구 시스템에 관한 연구)

  • Yang Hyung-Kyu;An Young-Hwa
    • Journal of Internet Computing and Services
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    • v.7 no.1
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    • pp.59-64
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    • 2006
  • Harn al proposed a GKRS(Global Key Recovery System) that combines the functions of the key recovery authorities and the public key certification authorities(CA), Among other features, user dominance(i.e, a user is allowed to select his own public-private key pair and especially a public element for verifying the validity of the public-private key pair)is proposed by [1] for wide acceptance of GKRS. In this paper, we attack the RSA version of GKRS by showing that its user-dominance feature and the corresponding key verification scheme employed by the CA allow for fraud by users against CA. We propose more secure GKPS than original GKPS, The proposed system makes the probability of user fraud negligible small.

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Key Recovery Algorithm from Randomly-Given Bits of Multi-Prime RSA and Prime Power RSA (비트 일부로부터 Multi-Prime RSA와 Prime Power RSA의 개인키를 복구하는 알고리즘)

  • Baek, Yoo-Jin
    • Journal of the Korea Institute of Information Security & Cryptology
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    • v.26 no.6
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    • pp.1401-1411
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    • 2016
  • The Multi-Prime RSA and the Prime Power RSA are the variants of the RSA cryptosystem, where the Multi-Prime RSA uses the modulus $N=p_1p_2{\cdots}p_r$ for distinct primes $p_1,p_2,{\cdots},p_r$ (r>2) and the Prime Power RSA uses the modulus $N=p^rq$ for two distinct primes p, q and a positive integer r(>1). This paper analyzes the security of these systems by using the technique given by Heninger and Shacham. More specifically, this paper shows that if the $2-2^{1/r}$ random portion of bits of $p_1,p_2,{\cdots},p_r$ is given, then $N=p_1p_2{\cdots}p_r$ can be factorized in the expected polynomial time and if the $2-{\sqrt{2}}$ random fraction of bits of p, q is given, then $N=p^rq$ can be factorized in the expected polynomial time. The analysis is then validated with experimental results for $N=p_1p_2p_3$, $N=p^2q$ and $N=p^3q$.