Encryption and risk
Richard Pieri
richard.pieri-Re5JQEeQqe8AvxtiuMwx3w at public.gmane.org
Wed Oct 7 10:22:59 EDT 2009
On Oct 7, 2009, at 1:35 AM, David Kramer wrote:
> That is a blatant case of the statistician drowning in a lake with an
> average depth of three feet. You have to understand what the numbers
> mean in real life.
No. I did specify an exhaustive keyspace search. That does mean
checking every possible key. As you say, you could get lucky and hit
a particular key after only a few seconds of the search. You are more
likely to witness the heat death of the universe before finding that
key (VNLL), which is why cryptanalytic attacks are used to attack
contemporary encryption. As Bruce Schneier is fond of saying, attacks
don't get worse, they get better.
--Rich P.
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