So we all know NIST is being puppeteered by the NSA, specifically in regards to quantum-secure encryption, which means you probably can't use that in certain situations. What are non-14-eye governments doing with encryption? Does anyone have any interesting sources or names of algorithms or anything that can help in this regard?

  • What_Religion_R_They [none/use name]
    hexagon
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    edit-2
    11 months ago

    Anyhow I wouldn't assume that NIST approved crypto is always compromised, just do your own research on specific ciphers, there will probably be some nerd out there criticizing them if they were really weakened by nist

    Yeah there is a nerd criticizing them 😭😭😭 which is why I posted this

    I'll have a look at NTRU, thank you.

    Regarding web stuff I know China pushes its own ciphers, I'm gonna read up on them later™.

    • YearOfTheCommieDesktop [they/them]
      ·
      11 months ago

      damn I didn't realize china had their own TLS ciphers and everything, pretty neat. I haven't seen any substantive criticism of SM4 or its associated hashing function, etc.

      Looking into it I found one or two fearmongering sources that go "this is chinese, the ietf only included it for compatibility, DONT USE IT", and a bunch of cryptanalysis papers, mostly from Chinese authors (but written in perfect english which is neat) that seem great but I don't have the expertise to evaluate them in any way.

      given that SM4, etc were classified until 2006, a lot of what's cutting edge now is probably classified.

      I did find this though: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SM9_(cryptography_standard) which is pretty interesting. I don't know if it's completely novel encryption techniques or if it uses an existing cipher under the hood but regardless very interesting stuff