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In a first, cryptographic keys protecting SSH connections stolen in new attack | Ars Technica
In a first, cryptographic keys protecting SSH connections stolen in new attack | Ars Technica
An error as small as a single flipped memory bit is all it takes to expose a private key. The vulnerability occurs when there are errors during the signature generation that takes place when a client and server are establishing a connection. It affects only keys using the RSA cryptographic algorithm, which the researchers found in roughly a third of the SSH signatures they examined. That translates to roughly 1 billion signatures out of the 3.2 billion signatures examined. Of the roughly 1 billion RSA signatures, about one in a million exposed the private key of the host.
·arstechnica.com·
In a first, cryptographic keys protecting SSH connections stolen in new attack | Ars Technica
Chinese researchers claim to have broken RSA with a quantum computer. Experts aren’t so sure.
Chinese researchers claim to have broken RSA with a quantum computer. Experts aren’t so sure.
Researchers in China claim to have reached a breakthrough in quantum computing, figuring out how they can break the RSA public-key encryption system using a quantum computer of around the power that will soon be publicly available. Breaking 2048-bit RSA — in other words finding a method to consistently and quickly discover the secret prime numbers underpinning the algorithm — would be extremely significant. Although the RSA algorithm itself has largely been replaced in consumer-facing protocols, such as Transport Layer Security, it is still widely used in older enterprise and operational technology software and in many code-signing certificates.
·therecord.media·
Chinese researchers claim to have broken RSA with a quantum computer. Experts aren’t so sure.
Chinese researchers claim to have broken RSA with a quantum computer. Experts aren’t so sure.
Chinese researchers claim to have broken RSA with a quantum computer. Experts aren’t so sure.
Researchers in China claim to have reached a breakthrough in quantum computing, figuring out how they can break the RSA public-key encryption system using a quantum computer of around the power that will soon be publicly available. Breaking 2048-bit RSA — in other words finding a method to consistently and quickly discover the secret prime numbers underpinning the algorithm — would be extremely significant. Although the RSA algorithm itself has largely been replaced in consumer-facing protocols, such as Transport Layer Security, it is still widely used in older enterprise and operational technology software and in many code-signing certificates.
·therecord.media·
Chinese researchers claim to have broken RSA with a quantum computer. Experts aren’t so sure.