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CHES
1999
Springer

Random Number Generators Founded on Signal and Information Theory

14 years 4 months ago
Random Number Generators Founded on Signal and Information Theory
The strength of a cryptographic function depends on the amount of entropy in the cryptovariables that are used as keys. Using a large key length with a strong algorithm is false comfort if the amount of entropy in the key is small. Unfortunately the amount of entropy driving a cryptographic function is usually overestimated, as entropy is confused with much weaker correlation properties and the entropy source is difficult to analyze. Reliable, high speed, and low cost generation of non-deterministic, highly entropic bits is quite difficult with many pitfalls. Natural analog processes can provide nondeterministic sources, but practical implementations introduce various biases. Convenient wide-band natural signals are typically 5 to 6 orders of magnitude less in voltage than other co-resident digital signals such as clock signals that rob those noise sources of their entropy. To address these problems, we have developed new theory and we have invented and implemented some new techniques....
David Paul Maher, Robert J. Rance
Added 03 Aug 2010
Updated 03 Aug 2010
Type Conference
Year 1999
Where CHES
Authors David Paul Maher, Robert J. Rance
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