--[Abstract]-- PGP is the most widely used hybrid cryptosystem around today. There have been AMPLE rumours regarding it's security (or lack there of). There have been rumours ranging from PRZ was coerced by the Gov't into placing backdoors into PGP, that the NSA has the ability to break RSA or IDEA in a reasonable amount of time, and so on. While I cannot confirm or deny these rumours with 100% certianty, I really doubt that either is true. This FAQ while not in the 'traditional FAQ format' answers some questions about the security of PGP, and should clear up some rumours... This FAQ is also available from the web: http://axion.physics.ubc.ca/pgp-attack.html http://ucsu.colorado.edu/~cantrick/pgphafaq.html http://www.lava.net/~jordy/PGPAttackFAQ.html http://www.stack.urc.tue.nl/~galactus/remailers/attack-faq.html [ The Feasibility of Breaking PGP ] [ The PGP attack FAQ ] 2/96 v. 2.0 by infiNity [daemon9@netcom.com / route@infonexus.com] -- [Brief introduction] -- There are a great many misconceptions out there about how vulnerable Pretty Good Privacy is to attack. This FAQ is designed to shed some light on the subject. It is not an introduction to PGP or cryptography. If you are not at least conversationally versed in either topic, readers are directed to The Infinity Concept issue 1, and the sci.crypt FAQ. Both documents are available via ftp from infonexus.com. This document can be found there as well: URL:ftp://ftp.infonexus.com/pub/Philes/Cryptography/PGP/PGPattackFAQ.gz PGP is a hybrid cryptosystem. It is made up of 4 cryptographic elements: It contains a symmetric cipher (IDEA), an asymmetric cipher (RSA), a one-way hash (MD5), and a random number generator (Which is two-headed, actually: it samples entropy from the user and then uses that to seed a PRNG). Each is subject to a different form of attack. 1 -- [The Symmetric Cipher] -- 1 IDEA, finalized in 1992 by Lai and Massey is a block cipher that operates on 64-bit blocks of data. There have been no advances in the cryptanalysis of standard IDEA that are publically known. (I know nothing of what the NSA has done, nor does most anyone.) The only method of attack, therefore, is brute force. -- Brute Force of IDEA -- As we all know the keyspace of IDEA is 128-bits. In base 10 notation that is: 340,282,366,920,938,463,463,374,607,431,768,211,456. To recover a particular key, one must, on average, search half the keyspace. That is 127 bits: 170,141,183,460,469,231,731,687,303715,884,105,728. If you had 1,000,000,000 machines that could try 1,000,000,000 keys/sec, it would still take all these machines longer than the universe as we know it has existed and then some, to find the key. IDEA, as far as present technology is concerned, is not vulnerable to brute-force attack, pure and simple. -- Other attacks against IDEA -- If we cannot crack the cipher, and we cannot brute force the key-space, what if we can find some weakness in the PRNG used by PGP to generate the psuedo-random IDEA session keys? This topic is covered in more detail in section 4. 2 -- [The Asymmetric Cipher] -- 2 RSA, the first full fledged public key cryptosystem was designed by Rivest, Shamir, and Adleman in 1977. RSA gets it's security from the apparent difficulty in factoring very large composites. However, nothing has been proven with RSA. It is not proved that factoring the public modulous is the only (best) way to break RSA. There may be an as yet undiscovered way to break it. It is also not proven that factoring *has* to be as hard as it is. There exists the possiblity that an advance in number theory may lead to the discovery of a polynomial time factoring algorithm. But, none of these things has happened, and no current research points in that direction. However, 3 things that are happening and will continue to happen that take away from the security of RSA are: the advances in factoring technique, computing power and the decrease in the cost of computing hardware. These things, especially the first one, work against the security of RSA. However, as computing power increases, so does the ability to generate larger keys. It is *much* easier to multiply very large primes than it is to factor the resulting composite (given today's understanding of number theory). -- The math of RSA in 7 fun-filled steps -- To understand the attacks on RSA, it is important to understand how RSA works. Briefly: - Find 2 very large primes, p and q. - Find n=pq (the public modulous). - Choose e, such that e infinity PI(n) / [ n / (ln (n) )] == 1 So, the approximation n/ln n gives with reasonable accuracy, the density of primes less than or equal to n: There are 17 prime numbers from 1-60. 60 / ln(60) = 14.65 An error of about 8% (this is not linear, however). To test a candidate number (n) for primality, one obvious and simple method is to try trial divisions. Try dividing n by each integer 2,3,...,sqrt(n). If n is prime, none of the trial divisors will divide it. Assuming each division takes constant time, this method has a worst case running time (if n is in fact prime) proportional to exponential, in the length of n. If n is non-trivial (which is the case for the PGP's candidate numbers) this approach is not feasible (this is also why trial division is not a viable method of attack against RSA). (Trial divsion has the one advantage of determining the prime factorization of n, however. But who wants to wait till the Universe explodes (implodes)?) -- Psuedo-Primality -- In order to test non-trivial candidates, PGP uses psuedo-primality testing. Psuedo-primality tests take a candidate number and test it for primality, returning with a certian degree of accuracy, whether or not it's prime. PGP uses the 4 Fermat Tests to test the numbers for primality. -- The Four Fermat Tests -- - Candidate number to be tested for primality: n. - Take the first 4 prime numbers b={2,3,5,7} - Take b^(n-1) % n = w - If w == 1; for all b, n is probably prime. Any other number and n is definitely not prime. While it *is* possible for a number to be reported as being prime when it is in reality a composite, it is very unlikely. After each successful test the likelyhood drops dramatically, after one test, the likelyhood is 1 in 10^13, after two tests, the likelyhood is 1 in 10^26, and if the number passes all four tests, the possibility of it not being prime is 1 in 10^52. The 4 Fermat Tests will *not* discard a prime number. -- The Carmichael Numbers -- Unfortunately, there are some numbers which are *not* prime, that do satisfy the equation b^(n-1) % n. These integers are known as The Carmichael Numbers, and are quite rare (the reason being because a Carmichael Number must not be divisable by the square of any prime and must be the product of at least three primes). The first three Carmichael Numbers are: 561, 1105, and 1729. They are so rare, in fact, there are only 255 of them less than 10^9. The chance of PGP generating a Carmichael Number is less than 1 in 10^50. -- Esoteric RSA attacks -- These attacks do not exhibit any profound weakness in RSA itself, just in certian implementations of the protocol. Most are not issues in PGP. -- Choosen cipher-text attack -- An attacker listens in on the insecure channel in which RSA messages are passed. The attacker collects an encrypted message c, from the target (destined for some other party). The attacker wants to be able to read this message without having to mount a serious factoring effort. In other words, she wants m=c^d. To recover m, the attacker first chooses a random number, r n. -- Timing attack against RSA -- A very new area of attack publically discovered by Paul Kocher deals with the fact that different cryptographic operations (in this case the modular exponentiation operations in RSA) take discretely different amounts of time to process. If the RSA computations are done without the Chinese Remainder theorem, the following applies: An attacker can exploit slight timing differences in RSA computations to, in many cases, recover d. The attack is a passive one where the attacker sits on a network and is able to observe the RSA operations. The attacker passively observes k operations measuring the time t it takes to compute each modular exponentation operation: m=c^d mod n. The attacker also knows c and n. The psuedo code of the attack: Algorithm to compute m=c^d mod n: Let m0 = 1. Let c0 = x. For i=0 upto (bits in d-1): If (bit i of d) is 1 then Let mi+1 = (mi * ci) mod n. Else Let mi+1 = mi. Let di+1 = di^2 mod n. End. This is very new (the public announcement was made on 12/7/95) and intense scrutiny of the attack has not been possible. However, Ron Rivest had this to say about countering it: - -------------------------------------------BEGIN INCLUDED TEXT--------------- From: Ron Rivest Newsgroups: sci.crypt Subject: Re: Announce: Timing cryptanalysis of RSA, DH, DSS Date: 11 Dec 1995 20:17:01 GMT Organization: MIT Laboratory for Computer Science The simplest way to defeat Kocher's timing attack is to ensure that the cryptographic computations take an amount of time that does not depend on the data being operated on. For example, for RSA it suffices to ensure that a modular multiplication always takes the same amount of time, independent of the operands. A second way to defeat Kocher's attack is to use blinding: you "blind" the data beforehand, perform the cryptographic computation, and then unblind afterwards. For RSA, this is quite simple to do. (The blinding and unblinding operations still need to take a fixed amount of time.) This doesn't give a fixed overall computation time, but the computation time is then a random variable that is independent of the operands. - - ============================================================================== Ronald L. Rivest 617-253-5880 617-253-8682(Fax) rivest@theory.lcs.mit.edu ============================================================================== - ---------------------------------------------END INCLUDED TEXT--------------- The blinding Rivest speaks of simply introduces a random value into the decryption process. So, m = c^d mod n becomes: m = r^-1(cr^e)^d mod n r is the random value, and r^-1 is it's inverse. PGP is not vulnerable to the timing attack as it uses the CRT to speed RSA operations. Also, since the timing attack requires an attacker to observe the cryptographic operations in real time (ie: snoop the decryption process from start to finish) and most people encrypt and decrypt off-line, it is further made inpractical. While the attack is definitly something to be wary of, it is theorectical in nature, and has not been done in practice as of yet. -- Other RSA attacks -- There are other attacks against RSA, such as the common modulous attack in which several users share n, but have different values for e and d. Sharing a common modulous with several users, can enable an attacker to recover a message without factoring n. PGP does not share public-key modulous' among users. If d is up to one quarter the size of n and e is less than n, d can be recovered without factoring. PGP does not choose small values for the decryption exponent. (If d were too small it might make a brute force sweep of d values feasible which is obviously a bad thing.) -- Keysizes -- It is pointless to make predictions for recommended keysizes. The breakneck speed at which technology is advancing makes it difficult and dangerous. Respected cryptographers will not make predictions past 10 years and I won't embarass myself trying to make any. For today's secrets, a 1024-bit is probably safe and a 2048-bit key definitely is. I wouldn't trust these numbers past the end of the century. However, it is worth mentioning that RSA would not have lastest this long if it was as fallible as some crackpots with middle initials would like you to believe. 3 -- [The one-way hash] -- 3 MD5 is the one-way hash used to hash the passphrase into the IDEA key and to sign documents. Message Digest 5 was designed by Rivest as a sucessor to MD4 (which was found to be weakened with reduced rounds). It is slower but more secure. Like all one-way hash functions, MD5 takes an arbitrary-length input and generates a unique output. -- Brute Force of MD5 -- The strength of any one-way hash is defined by how well it can randomize an arbitrary message and produce a unique output. There are two types of brute force attacks against a one-way hash function, pure brute force (my own terminolgy) and the birthday attack. -- Pure Brute Force Attack against MD5 -- The output of MD5 is 128-bits. In a pure brute force attack, the attacker has access to the hash of message H(m). She wants to find another message m' such that: H(m) = H(m'). To find such message (assuming it exists) it would take a machine that could try 1,000,000,000 messages per second about 1.07E22 years. (To find m would require the same amount of time.) -- The birthday attack against MD5 -- Find two messages that hash to the same value is known as a collision and is exploited by the birthday attack. The birthday attack is a statistical probability problem. Given n inputs and k possible outputs, (MD5 being the function to take n -> k) there are n(n-1)/2 pairs of inputs. For each pair, there is a probability of 1/k of both inputs producing the same output. So, if you take k/2 pairs, the probability will be 50% that a matching pair will be found. If n > sqrt(k), there is a good chance of finding a collision. In MD5's case, 2^64 messages need to be tryed. This is not a feasible attack given today's technology. If you could try 1,000,000 messages per second, it would take 584,942 years to find a collision. (A machine that could try 1,000,000,000 messages per second would take 585 years, on average.) For a successful account of the birthday against crypt(3), see: url: ftp://ftp.infonexus.com/pub/Philes/Cryptography/crypt3Collision.txt.gz -- Other attacks against MD5 -- Differential cryptanalysis has proven to be effective against one round of MD5, but not against all 4 (differential cryptanalysis looks at ciphertext pairs whose plaintexts has specfic differences and analyzes these differences as they propagate through the cipher). There was successful attack at the compression function itself that produces collsions, but this attack has no practical impact the security. If your copy of PGP has had the MD5 code altered to cause these collisions, it would fail the message digest verification and you would reject it as altered... Right? -- Passphrase Length and Information Theory -- According to conventional information theory, the English language has about 1.3 bits of entropy (information) per 8-bit character. If the pass phrase entered is long enough, the reuslting MD5 hash will be statisically random. For the 128-bit output of MD5, a pass phrase of about 98 characters will provide a random key: (8/1.3) * (128/8) = (128/1.3) = 98.46 characters How many people use a 98 character passphrase for you secret-key in PGP? Below is 98 characters... 123456789012345678901234567890123456789012356789012345678901234567\ \890123456789012345678 1.3 comes from the fact that an arbitrary readable English sentence is usually going to consist of certian letters, (e,r,s, and t are statiscally very common) thereby reducing it's entropy. If any of the 26 letters in the Latin alphabet were equally possible and likely (which is seldom the case) the entropy increases. The so-called absolute rate would, in this case, be: log(26) / log(2) = 4.7 bits In this case of increased entropy, a password with a truly random sequence of English characters will only need to be: (8/4.7) * (128/8) = (128/4.7) = 27.23 characters For more info on passphrase length, see the PGP passphrase FAQ: http://www.stack.urc.tue.nl/~galactus/remailers/passphrase-faq.html ftp://ftp.infonexus.com/pub/Philes/Cryptography/PGP/PGPpassphraseFAQ.gz 4 -- [The PRNG] -- 4 PGP employs 2 PRNG's to generate and manipulate (psuedo) random data. The ANSI X9.17 generator and a function which measures the entropy from the latency in a user's keystrokes. The random pool (which is the randseed.bin file) is used to seed the ANSI X9.17 PRNG (which uses IDEA, not 3DES). Randseed.bin is initially generated from trueRand which is the keystroke timer. The X9.17 generator is pre-washed with an MD5 hash of the plaintext and postwashed with some random data which is used to generate the next randseed.bin file. The process is broken up and discussd below. -- ANSI X9.17 (cryptRand) -- The ANSI X9.17 is the method of key generation PGP uses. It is oficially specified using 3DES, but was easily converted to IDEA. X9.17 requires 24 bytes of random data from randseed.bin. (PGP keeps an extra 384 bytes of state information for other uses...) When cryptRand starts, the randseed.bin file is washed (see below) and the first 24-bytes are used to initialize X9.17. It works as follows: E() = an IDEA encryption, with a reusable key used for key generation T = timestamp (data from randseed.bin used in place of timestamp) V = Initialization Vector, from randseed.bin R = random session key to be generated R = E[E(T) XOR V] the next V is generated thusly: V = E[E(T) XOR R] -- Latency Timer (trueRand) -- The trueRand generator attempts to measure entropy from the latency of a user's keystrokes every time the user types on the keyboard. It is used to generate the initial randseed.bin which is in turn used to seed to X9.17 generator. The quality of the output of trueRand is dependent upon it's input. If the input has a low amount of entropy, the output will not be as random as possible. In order to maxmize the entropy, the keypresses should be spaced as randomly as possible. -- X9.17 Prewash with MD5 -- In most situations, the attacker does not know the content of the plaintext being encrypted by PGP. So, in most cases, washing the X9.17 generator with an MD5 hash of the plaintext, simply adds to security. This is based on the assumption that this added unknown information will add to the entropy of the generator. If, in the event that the attacker has some information about the plaintext (perhaps the attacker knows which file was encrypted, and wishes to prove this fact) the attacker may be able to execute a known-plaintext attack against X9.17. However, it is not likely that, with all the other precautions taken, that this would weaken the generator. -- Randseed.bin wash -- The randseed is washed before and after each use. In PGP's case a wash is an IDEA encryption in cipher-feedback mode. Since IDEA is considered secure (see section 1), it should be just as hard to determine the 128-bit IDEA key as it is to glean any information from the wash. The IDEA key used is the MD5 hash of the plaintext and an initialization vector of zero. The IDEA session key is then generated as is an IV. The postwash is considered more secure. More random bytes are generated to reinitialize randseed.bin. These are encrypted with the same key as the PGP encrypted message. The reason for this is that if the attacker knows the session key, she can decrypt the PGP message directly and would have no need to attack the randseed.bin. (A note, the attacker might be more interested in the state of the randseed.bin, if they were attacking all messages, or the message that the user is expected to send next). 5 -- [Practical Attacks] -- 5 Most of the attacks outlined above are either not possible or not feasable by the average adversary. So, what can the average cracker do to subvert the otherwise stalwart security of PGP? As it turns out, there are several "doable" attacks that can be launched by the typical cracker. They do not attack the cryptosystem protocols themselves, (which have shown to be secure) but rather system specific implementations of PGP. -- Passive Attacks (Snooping) -- These attacks do not do need to do anything proactive and can easily go undetected. -- Keypress Snooping -- Still a very effective method of attack, keypress snooping can subvert the security of the strongest cryptosystem. If an attacker can install a keylogger, and capture the passphrase of an unwary target, then no cryptanalysis whatsoever is necessary. The attacker has the passphrase to unlock the RSA private key. The system is completely compromised. The methods vary from system to system, but I would say DOS-based PGP would be the most vulnerable. DOS is the easiest OS to subvert, and has the most key-press snooping tools that I am aware of. All an attacker would have to do would be gain access to the machine for under 5 minutes on two seperate occasions and the attack would be complete. The first time to install the snooping software, the second time, to remove it, and recover the goods. (If the machine is on a network, this can all be done *remotely* and the ease of the attack increases greatly.) Even if the target boots clean, not loading any TSR's, a boot sector virus could still do the job, transparently. Just recently, the author has discovered a key logging utility for Windows, which expands this attack to work under Windows-based PGP shells (this logger is available from the infonexus via ftp, BTW). ftp://ftp.infonexus.com/pub/ToolsOfTheTrade/DOS/KeyLoggers/ Keypress snooping under Unix is a bit more complicated, as root access is needed, unless the target is entering her passphrase from an X-Windows GUI. There are numerous key loggers available to passively observe keypresses from an X-Windows session. Check: ftp://ftp.infonexus.com/pub/SourceAndShell/Xwindows/ -- Van Eck Snooping -- The original invisible threat. Below is a clip from a posting by noted information warfare guru Winn Schwartau describing a Van Eck attack: - -------------------------------------------BEGIN INCLUDED TEXT--------------- Van Eck Radiation Helps Catch Spies "Winn Schwartau" < p00506@psilink.com > Thu, 24 Feb 94 14:13:19 -0500 Van Eck in Action Over the last several years, I have discussed in great detail how the electromagnetic emissions from personal computers (and electronic gear in general) can be remotely detected without a hard connection and the information on the computers reconstructed. Electromagnetic eavesdropping is about insidious as you can get: the victim doesn't and can't know that anyone is 'listening' to his computer. To the eavesdropper, this provides an ideal means of surveillance: he can place his eavesdropping equipment a fair distance away to avoid detection and get a clear representation of what is being processed on the computer in question. (Please see previous issues of Security Insider Report for complete technical descriptions of the techniques.) The problem, though, is that too many so called security experts, (some prominent ones who really should know better) pooh-pooh the whole concept, maintaining they've never seen it work. Well, I'm sorry that none of them came to my demonstrations over the years, but Van Eck radiation IS real and does work. In fact, the recent headline grabbing spy case illuminates the point. Exploitation of Van Eck radiation appears to be responsible, at least in part, for the arrest of senior CIA intelligence officer Aldrich Hazen Ames on charges of being a Soviet/Russian mole. According to the Affidavit in support of Arrest Warrant, the FBI used "electronic surveillance of Ames' personal computer and software within his residence," in their search for evidence against him. On October 9, 1993, the FBI "placed an electronic monitor in his (Ames') computer," suggesting that a Van Eck receiver and transmitter was used to gather information on a real-time basis. Obviously, then, this is an ideal tool for criminal investigation - one that apparently works quite well. (From the Affidavit and from David Johnston, "Tailed Cars and Tapped Telephones: How US Drew Net on Spy Suspects," New York Times, February 24, 1994.) >From what we can gather at this point, the FBI black-bagged Ames' house and installed a number of surveillance devices. We have a high confidence factor that one of them was a small Van Eck detector which captured either CRT signals or keyboard strokes or both. The device would work like this: A small receiver operating in the 22MHz range (pixel frequency) would detect the video signals minus the horizontal and vertical sync signals. Since the device would be inside the computer itself, the signal strength would be more than adequate to provide a quality source. The little device would then retransmit the collected data in real-time to a remote surveillance vehicle or site where the video/keyboard data was stored on a video or digital storage medium. At a forensic laboratory, technicians would recreate the original screens and data that Mr. Ames entered into his computer. The technicians would add a vertical sync signal of about 59.94 Hz, and a horizontal sync signal of about 27KHz. This would stabilize the roll of the picture. In addition, the captured data would be subject to "cleansing" - meaning that the spurious noise in the signal would be stripped using Fast Fourier Transform techniques in either hardware or software. It is likely, though, that the FBI's device contained within it an FFT chip designed by the NSA a couple of years ago to make the laboratory process even easier. I spoke to the FBI and US Attorney's Office about the technology used for this, and none of them would confirm or deny the technology used "on an active case." Of course it is possible that the FBI did not place a monitoring device within the computer itself, but merely focused an external antenna at Mr. Ames' residence to "listen" to his computer from afar, but this presents additional complexities for law enforcement. 1. The farther from the source the detection equipment sits means that the detected information is "noisier" and requires additional forensic analysis to derive usable information. 2. Depending upon the electromagnetic sewage content of the immediate area around Mr. Ames' neighborhood, the FBI surveillance team would be limited as to what distances this technique would still be viable. Distance squared attenuation holds true. 3. The closer the surveillance team sits to the target, the more likely it is that their activities will be discovered. In either case, the technology is real and was apparently used in this investigation. But now, a few questions arise. 1. Does a court surveillance order include the right to remotely eavesdrop upon the unintentional emanations from a suspect's electronic equipment? Did the warrants specify this technique or were they shrouded under a more general surveillance authorization? Interesting question for the defense. 2. Is the information garnered in this manner admissible in court? I have read papers that claim defending against this method is illegal in the United States, but I have been unable to substantiate that supposition. 3. If this case goes to court, it would seem that the investigators would have to admit HOW they intercepted signals, and a smart lawyer (contradictory allegory :-) would attempt to pry out the relevant details. This is important because the techniques are generally classified within the intelligence community even though they are well understood and explained in open source materials. How will the veil of national security be dropped here? To the best of my knowledge, this is the first time that the Government had admitted the use of Van Eck (Tempest Busting etc.) in public. If anyone knows of any others, I would love to know about it. - ---------------------------------------------END INCLUDED TEXT--------------- The relevance to PGP is obvious, and the threat is real. Snooping the passphrase from the keyboard, and even whole messages from the screen are viable attacks. This attack, however exotic it may seem, is not beyond the capability of anyone with some technical know-how and the desire to read PGP encrypted files. -- Memory Space Snooping -- In a multi-user system such as Unix, the physical memory of the machine can be examined by anyone with the proper privaleges (usally root). In comparsion with factoring a huge composite number, opening up the virtual memory of the system (/dev/kmem) and seeking to a user's page and directly reading it, is trivial. -- Disk Cache Snooping -- In multitasking environments such as Windows, the OS has a nasty habit of paging the contents of memory to disk, usally transparently to the user, whenever it feels the need to free up some RAM. This information can sit, in the clear, in the swapfile for varying lengths of time, just waiting for some one to come along and recover it. Again, in a networked environment where machine access can be done with relative impunity, this file can be stolen without the owner's consent or knowledge. -- Packet Sniffing -- If you use PGP on a host which you access remotely, you can be vulnerable to this attack. Unless you use some sort of session encrypting utility, such as SSH, DESlogin, or some sort of network protocol stack encryption (end to end or link by link) you are sending your passphrase, and messages across in the clear. A packet sniffer sitting at a intermediate point between your terminal can capture all this information quietly and efficiently. Packet sniffers are available at the infonexus: ftp://ftp.infonexus.com/pub/SourceAndShell/Sniffers/ -- Active Attacks -- These attacks are more proactive in nature and tend to be a bit more difficult to wage. -- Trojan Horse -- The age old trojan horse attack is still a very effective means of compromise. The concept of a trojan horse should not be foriegn to anyone. An apparently harmless program that in reality is evil and does potentially malicious things to your computer. How does this sound...: Some 31it3 coder has come up with a k3wl new Windows front-end to PGP. All the newbies run out and ftp a copy. It works great, with a host of buttons and scrollbars, and it even comes with a bunch of *.wav files and support for a SB AWE 32 so you can have the 16-bit CD quality sound of a safe locking when you encrypt your files. It runs in a tiny amount of memory, coded such that nothing leaks, it intercepts OS calls that would otherwise have it's contents paged to disk and makes sure all the info stays in volatile memory. It works great (the first Windows app thar does). Trouble is, this program actually has a few lines of malevolent code that record your secret-key passphrase, and if it finds a modem (who doesn't have a modem these days?) it 'atm0's the modem and dials up a hard coded number to some compromised computer or modem bank and sends the info through. Possible? Yes. Likely? No. -- Reworked Code -- The code to PGP is publically available. Therefore it is easy to modify. If someone were to modify the sourcecode to PGP inserting a sneaky backdoor and leave it at some distribution point, it could be disasterous. However, it is also very easy to detect. Simply verify the checksums. Patching the MD5 module to report a false checksum is also possible, so verify using a known good copy. A more devious attack would be to modify the code, compile it and surreptitouly plant in the target system. In a networked environment this can be done without ever having physical access to the machine. 6 -- [What if...] -- 6 ...My secret key was comprimsed? A PGP secret key is kept conventionally encrypted with IDEA. Assuming your passphrase is secure enough (see section 3) the best method of attack will be a brute force key-search. If an attacker could test 1,000,000,000,000 keys per second, it would take 1x10^17 years before odds will be in the attacker's favor... ...PGP ran outta primes? There are an infinite amount of prime numbers. The approximate density of primes lesser than or equal to n is n/ln(n). For a 1024-bit key, this yields: 1.8*10^308/ln(1.8*10^308) = 2.5*10^305 There are about 2.5*10^228 times more prime numbers less than 1024-bits than there are atoms in the universe... ...What if someone made a list of all these prime numbers? If you could store 1,000,000 terabytes of information of a device that weighs 1 gram, (and we figure each number fits in a space of 128 bytes or less) we would need a device that weighs 3.2*10^289 grams or 7*10^286 pounds. This is 1.6*10^256 times more massive than our sun. Nevermind the fact that we don't have enough matter to even concieve of building such a device, and if we could, it would collapse into a black-hole... ...And used them in a brute force search? There are 2.5E305(2.5E305-1)/2 possible pairs. This is 3.12*10^610 combinations. Absurd, isn't it? ...PGP chose composites instead of primes? The likelyhood of the Fermat Tests of passing a composite off as a prime is 1 in 10^52. If PGP could generate 1,000,000,000,000 primes per second, It would take about 1x10^32 years until odds are better than even for that to happen. 7 -- [Closing Comments] -- 7 I have presented factual data, statistical data, and projected data. Form your own conclusions. Perhaps the NSA has found a polynomial-time (read: *fast*) factoring algorithm. But we cannot dismiss an otherwise secure cryptosystem due to paranoia. Of course, on the same token, we cannot trust cryptosystems on hearsay or assumptions of security. Bottom line is this: in the field of computer security, it pays to be cautious. But it doens't pay to be un-informed or needlessly paranoid. Know the facts. -- [Thank You's (in no particular order)] -- PRZ, Collin Plumb, Paul Kocher, Bruce Schneier, Paul Rubin, Stephen McCluskey, Adam Back, Bill Unruh, Ben Cantrick, Jordy, Galactus, the readers of sci.crypt and the comp.security.* groups... - -- [ route@infonexus.com ] Guild member, Information enthusiast, Hacker, demon ...this universe is MINE... I am *GOD* here... -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: 2.6.2 iQCVAwUBMbCwcAtXkSokWGapAQHo0gP+MaL7fi3e7yRxfbUglOuFJdD06oL+nwHJ iRvDCvs20zfmatZW+Ya5bzdbEkAmxsDe4uJ8aL1ATu66CO5SnoChDHRfyXPdhgL1 gZnEIZv7oFw4WOCPrIWw2QpvpegnIyvwIHCPTDzhiRhb3eV+H1GQ2gwHNjxRtfp5 mp2XHOras20= =je1v -----END PGP SIGNATURE-----