Cryptovirology is a field that studies how to use cryptography to design powerful malicious software. The field was born with the observation that public-key cryptography can be used to break the symmetry between what an antivirus analyst sees regarding a virus and what the virus writer sees. The former only sees a public key whereas the latter sees a public key and corresponding private key. The first attack that was identified in the field is called "cryptoviral extortion". In this attack a virus, worm, or trojan hybrid encrypts the victim's files and the user must pay the malware author to receive the needed session key (which is encrypted under the author's public key that is contained in the malware) if the user does not have backups and needs the files back. The field also encompasses covert attacks in which the attacker secretly steals private information such as private keys. An example of the latter type of attack are asymmetric backdoors. An asymmetric backdoor is a backdoor (e.g., in a http://www.cryptovirology.org) that can be used only by the attacker, even after it is found. This contrasts with the traditional backdoor that is symmetric, i.e., anyone that finds it can use it. Kleptography, a subfield of cryptovirology, is concerned with the study of asymmetric back doors in key generation algorithms, digital signature algorithms, key exchanges, and so on.
http://www.cryptovirology.org
Saturday, September 10, 2011
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Quite informative article.But Its really hard to read.Earlier I thought that its my interenet speed issue that page is not loading properly.But I tried it number of times and no change.The text color is same as background i.e. black so its hard to read and I did it by selecting the text.digital signatures
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