Scientists close to cracking 1024-bit RSA encryption
By Rene Millman,
Encryption researchers are close to cracking the 1024-bit RSA encryption algorithm after demonstrating that a 307-bit Mersenne number could be broken down into primes. According to the scientists, the breakthrough will lead to changes in the way data is encrypted.
The researchers from the Ecoles Polytechniques Federales de Lausanne, the University of Bonn, and Japanese telco NTT in breaking down the huge number also broke a new record for discovering the prime factors of the number in 11 months.
The cracking of the number was achieved using the special number field sieve method developed by cryptology professor Arjen Lenstra, his brother Hendrik, then a professor at UC Berkeley, English mathematician John Pollard and Mark Manasse from DEC in the late eighties. The method factored the number (21039-1) using around 100 years of computing time to crack it.
The researchers said that identifying large prime numbers was the easy bit. Factoring, or breaking a number down into its prime components, is extremely difficult.
RSA encryption, named for the three individuals who devised the technique (Ronald Rivest, Adi Shamir and Leonard Adleman), takes advantage of this difficulty. Using the RSA method, information is encrypted using a large composite number, usually 1024 bits in size, created by multiplying together two 150 digit prime numbers. As the person who knows these two numbers, the "keys", they can read the message.
And as there is a limitless supply of large prime numbers, it is easy to produce unique keys. The researchers said that information encrypted this way is secure, because "no one has ever been able to factor these huge numbers, at least not yet."
Lenstra said that increased computing power meant that while the feat would have been unthinkable back in the 1990 when he first applied number theory and distributed computing to the task of breaking factoring records, he and his team are now very close to cracking 1024-bit encryption.
"Last time, it took nine years for us to generalise from a special to a non-special hard-to factor number (155 digits). I won't make predictions, but let's just say it might be a good idea to stay tuned," said Lenstra.
advertisement
Latest Security Features
IT around the world: Russia
In the first of an on-going series examining IT markets around the globe, we look at whether investing in Russia is worth the risk – and how to go about it the right way.
- Chinese web control an Olympic challenge for tech firms
- SOS Bletchley Park
- Where will IT be in 2015?
- Q&A: John Stewart, Cisco's chief security officer
- NHS IT - something to celebrate?
- Q&A: Tom Ilube, head of Garlik
- Ten of the most infamous ‘black hat’ hackers
- USB Flash Disks: A modern day business curse?
- Creating a mobile data management policy
Latest Security Reviews
AVG Internet Security SBS Edition 8.0
Rating: ![]()
- Finjan Vital Security Web Appliance NG-6000S
- LogLogic MX2010
- Exclusive: WatchGuard Firebox Core X750e
- Sophos ES4000 Security Appliance
- Microsoft Forefront Security for Exchange and SharePoint
- EXCLUSIVE: Juniper Networks SSG 550 UTM appliance
- EXCLUSIVE: Arbor Networks Peakflow X 3.7
- EXCLUSIVE: Check Point UTM-1 1050
- EXCLUSIVE: Finjan Vital Security NG-5100
advertisement
Latest News Videos in Security
Video: Q&A with Richard Archdeacon, Symantec
IT PRO speaks to Richard Archdeacon, director, global services, at the information security software vendor Symantec.
White papers
Want more background on today's hottest IT trends?
Visit IT PRO's white paper library for more on virtualisation, encryption and other topics.
Register for IT PRO
You'll get exclusive member benefits including free white papers, downloads, Webinars and weekly newsletters full of the latest IT PRO news, reviews, insight and expertise.



Social Bookmark this article: What is this?