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doctoral thesis

Statistical cryptanalysis of block ciphers

Junod, Pascal  
2005

Since the development of cryptology in the industrial and academic worlds in the seventies, public knowledge and expertise have grown in a tremendous way, notably because of the increasing, nowadays almost ubiquitous, presence of electronic communication means in our lives. Block ciphers are inevitable building blocks of the security of various electronic systems. Recently, many advances have been published in the field of public-key cryptography, being in the understanding of involved security models or in the mathematical security proofs applied to precise cryptosystems. Unfortunately, this is still not the case in the world of symmetric-key cryptography and the current state of knowledge is far from reaching such a goal. However, block and stream ciphers tend to counterbalance this lack of "provable security" by other advantages, like high data throughput and ease of implementation. In the first part of this thesis, we would like to add a (small) stone to the wall of provable security of block ciphers with the (theoretical and experimental) statistical analysis of the mechanisms behind Matsui's linear cryptanalysis as well as more abstract models of attacks. For this purpose, we consider the underlying problem as a statistical hypothesis testing problem and we make a heavy use of the Neyman-Pearson paradigm. Then, we generalize the concept of linear distinguisher and we discuss the power of such a generalization. Furthermore, we introduce the concept of sequential distinguisher, based on sequential sampling, and of aggregate distinguishers, which allows to build sub-optimal but efficient distinguishers. Finally, we propose new attacks against reduced-round version of the block cipher IDEA. In the second part, we propose the design of a new family of block ciphers named FOX. First, we study the efficiency of optimal diffusive components when implemented on low-cost architectures, and we present several new constructions of MDS matrices; then, we precisely describe FOX and we discuss its security regarding linear and differential cryptanalysis, integral attacks, and algebraic attacks. Finally, various implementation issues are considered.

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Type
doctoral thesis
DOI
10.5075/epfl-thesis-3179
Author(s)
Junod, Pascal  
Advisors
Vaudenay, Serge  
Jury

James Massey, Willi Meier, Stephan Morgenthaler, Jacques Stern, Emre Telatar

Date Issued

2005

Publisher

EPFL

Publisher place

Lausanne

Public defense year

2005-02-04

Thesis number

3179

Total of pages

281

EPFL units
LASEC  
Faculty
IC  
Section
IC-SSC  
School
ISC  
Available on Infoscience
March 16, 2005
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/212546
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