Key-alternating ciphers in a provable setting: Encryption using a small number of public permutations

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Abstract

This paper considers-for the first time-the concept of key-alternating ciphers in a provable security setting. Key-alternating ciphers can be seen as a generalization of a construction proposed by Even and Mansour in 1991. This construction builds a block cipher PX from an n-bit permutation P and two n-bit keys k 0 and k 1, setting PX k0,k 1 (x) = k 1 ⊕ P(x ⊕ k 0). Here we consider a (natural) extension of the Even-Mansour construction with t permutations P 1,.,P t and t+1 keys, k 0,., k t . We demonstrate in a formal model that such a cipher is secure in the sense that an attacker needs to make at least 2 2n/3 queries to the underlying permutations to be able to distinguish the construction from random. We argue further that the bound is tight for t=2 but there is a gap in the bounds for t>2, which is left as an open and interesting problem. Additionally, in terms of statistical attacks, we show that the distribution of Fourier coefficients for the cipher over all keys is close to ideal. Lastly, we define a practical instance of the construction with t=2 using AES referred to as AES 2. Any attack on AES 2 with complexity below 2 85 will have to make use of AES with a fixed known key in a non-black box manner. However, we conjecture its security is 2 128. © 2012 International Association for Cryptologic Research.

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Bogdanov, A., Knudsen, L. R., Leander, G., Standaert, F. X., Steinberger, J., & Tischhauser, E. (2012). Key-alternating ciphers in a provable setting: Encryption using a small number of public permutations. In Lecture Notes in Computer Science (including subseries Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence and Lecture Notes in Bioinformatics) (Vol. 7237 LNCS, pp. 45–62). https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-29011-4_5

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