GnuPG Celebrates 10 Years
GnuPG Celebrates 10 Years
Posted Dec 30, 2007 9:12 UTC (Sun) by flewellyn (subscriber, #5047)In reply to: GnuPG Celebrates 10 Years by Nelson
Parent article: GnuPG Celebrates 10 Years
DES has never been "cracked."
As a matter of fact, yes, it has.
You have to also understand that the ciphers that have been developed by actual cryptographers in the last 10 or so years that have been "cracked" the crack is almost never actually possible to do, it's just calculatably more efficient than brute force. It usually takes an intractable amount of processing power or storage to perform these "cracks" and the actual crack.
See the above link. 22 hours using a distributed network is not infeasible. And this was in 1999, almost 9 years ago! Computers are much more powerful now, and massive parallel clusters are much more widespread. It's conceivable today that DES could be broken in a matter of hours.
Posted Dec 30, 2007 17:13 UTC (Sun)
by dmaxwell (guest, #14010)
[Link]
Posted Dec 30, 2007 19:30 UTC (Sun)
by Nelson (subscriber, #21712)
[Link]
Do the math on AES then, if that's the best way to "crack" it then AES potentially be secure for centuries. And then there is EDE "Triple-AES" if we actually need something better.
See the above link. 22 hours using a distributed network is not infeasible. And this was in 1999, almost 9 years ago! Computers are much more powerful now, and massive parallel clusters are much more widespread. It's conceivable today that DES could be broken in a matter of hours.
GnuPG Celebrates 10 Years
The OP is correct. DES has not been cracked in a cryptoanalytic sense. It has been brute forced because trying every key in a 56 bit keyspace is now practical. Any true crack to a cypher algorithm reduces the keyspace enough to make a brute force search practical. DES is simply weak in the keyspace dept. The math behind it is good.
Brute force isn't a "crack."
GnuPG Celebrates 10 Years