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Academic literature on the topic 'Sécurité post-quantique'
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Sécurité post-quantique"
Deneuville, Jean-Christophe. "Contributions à la cryptographie post-quantique." Thesis, Limoges, 2016. http://www.theses.fr/2016LIMO0112/document.
Full textIn the likely event where a quantum computer sees the light, number theoretic based cryptographic primitives being actually in use might become deciduous. This results in an important need to design schemes that could face off this new threat. Lattices and Error Correcting Codes are mathematical tools allowing to build algebraic problems, for which – up to-date – no quantum algorithm significantly speeding up their resolution is known. In this thesis, we propose four such kind cryptographic primitives: two signatures schemes (among those a traceable one) based on lattices, a signature delegation protocol using fully homomorphic encryption, and a new framework for building very efficient and practical code-based cryptosystems. These contributions are fed with concrete parameters allowing to gauge the concrete costs of security in a post-quantum world
Kaim, Guillaume. "Cryptographie post-quantique pour la protection de la vie privée." Thesis, Rennes 1, 2020. http://www.theses.fr/2020REN1S077.
Full textThe past few years have seen the rising of the quantum computers, that are a serious threat to nearly all the actual cryptographic schemes used in practice. In this thesis we propose some new constructions to prevent this obsolescence by building our schemes on the mathematical tool of lattices that is assumed post-quantum resistant. We firstly develop a group signature scheme, allowing each member composing the group to anonymously sign on the behalf of the group. We add a supplementary property, which is the froward secrecy. This property cut the time in periods, such that each secret key is updated when entering a new period. We also propose a blind signature scheme, which is an interactive protocol between an user, who wants to sign a message, with a signer who possesses the signing secret key. We improve the state-of-the art by proposing a constructions without any restart and with a more efficient security. Finally as a use case of the blind signature, we develop an evoting protocol that take as a basis the construction described above
Tale, kalachi Herve. "Sécurité des protocoles cryptographiques fondés sur la théorie des codes correcteurs d'erreurs." Thesis, Normandie, 2017. http://www.theses.fr/2017NORMR045/document.
Full textContrary to the cryptosystems based on number theory, the security of cryptosystems based on error correcting codes appears to be resistant to the emergence of quantum computers. Another advantage of these systems is that the encryption and decryption are very fast, about five times faster for encryption, and 10 to 100 times faster for decryption compared to RSA cryptosystem. Nowadays, the interest of scientific community in code-based cryptography is highly motivated by the latest announcement of the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST). They initiated the Post-Quantum cryptography Project which aims to define new standards for quantum resistant cryptography and fixed the deadline for public key cryptographic algorithm submissions for November 2017. This announcement motivates to study the security of existing schemes in order to find out whether they are secure. This thesis thus presents several attacks which dismantle several code-based encryption schemes. We started by a cryptanalysis of a modified version of the Sidelnikov cryptosystem proposed by Gueye and Mboup [GM13] which is based on Reed-Muller codes. This modified scheme consists in inserting random columns in the secret generating matrix or parity check matrix. The cryptanalysis relies on the computation of the square of the public code. The particular nature of Reed-Muller which are defined by means of multivariate binary polynomials, permits to predict the values of the dimensions of the square codes and then to fully recover in polynomial time the secret positions of the random columns. Our work shows that the insertion of random columns in the Sidelnikov scheme does not bring any security improvement. The second result is an improved cryptanalysis of several variants of the GPT cryptosystem which is a rank-metric scheme based on Gabidulin codes. We prove that any variant of the GPT cryptosystem which uses a right column scrambler over the extension field as advocated by the works of Gabidulin et al. [Gab08, GRH09, RGH11] with the goal to resist Overbeck’s structural attack [Ove08], are actually still vulnerable to that attack. We show that by applying the Frobeniusoperator appropriately on the public key, it is possible to build a Gabidulin code having the same dimension as the original secret Gabidulin code, but with a lower length. In particular, the code obtained by this way corrects less errors than thesecret one but its error correction capabilities are beyond the number of errors added by a sender, and consequently an attacker is able to decrypt any ciphertext with this degraded Gabidulin code. We also considered the case where an isometrictransformation is applied in conjunction with a right column scrambler which has its entries in the extension field. We proved that this protection is useless both in terms of performance and security. Consequently, our results show that all the existingtechniques aiming to hide the inherent algebraic structure of Gabidulin codes have failed. To finish, we studied the security of the Faure-Loidreau encryption scheme [FL05] which is also a rank-metric scheme based on Gabidulin codes. Inspired by our precedent work and, although the structure of the scheme differs considerably from the classical setting of the GPT cryptosystem, we show that for a range of parameters, this scheme is also vulnerable to a polynomial-time attack that recovers the private key by applying Overbeck’s attack on an appropriate public code. As an example we break in a few seconds parameters with 80-bit security claim
Bonnoron, Guillaume. "A journey towards practical fully homomorphic encryption." Thesis, Ecole nationale supérieure Mines-Télécom Atlantique Bretagne Pays de la Loire, 2018. http://www.theses.fr/2018IMTA0073/document.
Full textCraig Gentry presented in 2009 the first fully homomorphic encryption scheme. Since then, a tremendous effort has been, and still is, dedicated by the cryptographic community to make practical this new kind of cryptography. It is revolutionnary because it enables direct computation on encrypted data (without the need for the computing entity to decrypt them). Several trends have been developed in parallel, exploring on one side fully homomorphic encryption schemes, more versatile for applications but more costly in terms of time and memory. On the other side, the somewhat homomorphic encryption schemes are less flexible but more efficient. This thesis, achieved within the Chair of Naval Cyber Defence, contributes to these trends. We have endorsed different roles. First, an attacker position to assess the hardness of the security assumptions of the proposals. Then, we conducted a state-of-the-art of the most promising schemes in order to identify the best(s) depending on the use-cases and to give precise advice to appropriately set the parameters that drive security level, ciphertext sizes and computation costs. Last, we endorsed a designer role. We proposed a new powerful fully homomorphic encryption scheme together with its open-source implementation, available on github
Schrottenloher, André. "Quantum Algorithms for Cryptanalysis and Quantum-safe Symmetric Cryptography." Electronic Thesis or Diss., Sorbonne université, 2021. http://www.theses.fr/2021SORUS271.
Full textModern cryptography relies on the notion of computational security. The level of security given by a cryptosystem is expressed as an amount of computational resources required to break it. The goal of cryptanalysis is to find attacks, that is, algorithms with lower complexities than the conjectural bounds.With the advent of quantum computing devices, these levels of security have to be updated to take a whole new notion of algorithms into account. At the same time, cryptography is becoming widely used in small devices (smart cards, sensors), with new cost constraints.In this thesis, we study the security of secret-key cryptosystems against quantum adversaries.We first build new quantum algorithms for k-list (k-XOR or k-SUM) problems, by composing exhaustive search procedures. Next, we present dedicated cryptanalysis results, starting with a new quantum cryptanalysis tool, the offline Simon's algorithm. We describe new attacks against the lightweight algorithms Spook and Gimli and we perform the first quantum security analysis of the standard cipher AES.Finally, we specify Saturnin, a family of lightweight cryptosystems oriented towards post-quantum security. Thanks to a very similar structure, its security relies largely on the analysis of AES
Debris-Alazard, Thomas. "Cryptographie fondée sur les codes : nouvelles approches pour constructions et preuves ; contribution en cryptanalyse." Electronic Thesis or Diss., Sorbonne université, 2019. http://www.theses.fr/2019SORUS482.
Full textIn this thesis we study code-based cryptography. By this term we mean the crypto-systems whose security relies on the generic decoding problem. The first of those systems is a public key encryption scheme proposed by McEliece in 1978. Four decades later, no attack is known to present a serious threat on the system, even on a quantum computer. This makes code-based cryptography a credible candidate for post-quantum cryptography. First we give attacks against the code-based signature scheme RankSign, which was proposed to the post-quantum standardization of the NIST, and against the first code-based Identity-Based-Encryption scheme. On the other hand we propose a new code-based signature scheme: Wave. For this design we introduced a new trapdoor, the family of generalized (U,U+V)-codes. We show how to decode them for weights such that the generic decoding problem is hard. Then we show how to follow the Gentry-Peikert and Vaikuntanathan strategy which has proved to be fruitful in lattice-based cryptography. This was done by avoiding any information leakage of signatures thanks to an efficient rejection sampling. Furthermore, for the first time we propose a crypto-system whose security relies on the generic decoding problem for high distances. We give in this thesis the best known algorithm to solve this problem. At last, we study one of the few alternatives to information set decoding: the statistical decoding. First we improve algorithms to compute parity-check equations of small or moderate weight and we make the first asymptotic study of its complexity. We show that statistical decoding is not competitive with information set decoding contrary to what was claimed. This study relies on new results about Krawtchouk polynomials
Zijlstra, Timo. "Accélérateurs matériels sécurisés pour la cryptographie post-quantique." Thesis, Lorient, 2020. http://www.theses.fr/2020LORIS564.
Full textShor's quantum algorithm can be used to efficiently solve the integer factorisation problem and the discrete logarithm in certain groups. The security of the most commonly used public key cryptographic protocols relies on the conjectured hardness of exactly these mathematical problems. A sufficiently large quantum computer could therefore pose a threat to the confidentiality and authenticity of secure digital communication. Post quantum cryptography relies on mathematical problems that are computationally hard for quantum computers, such as Learning with Errors (LWE) and its variants RLWE and MLWE. In this thesis, we present and compare FPGA implementations of LWE, RLWE and MLWE based public key encryption algorithms. We discuss various trade-offs between security, computation time and hardware cost. The implementations are parallelized in order to obtain maximal speed-up. We show that MLWE has the best performance in terms of computation time and area utilization, and can be parallelized more efficiently than RLWE. We also discuss hardware security and propose countermeasures against side channel attacks for RLWE. We consider countermeasures from the state of the art, such as masking and blinding, and propose improvements to these algorithms. Moreover, we propose new countermeasures based on redundant number representation and the random shuffling of operations. All countermeasures are implemented on FPGA to compare their cost and computation time overhead. Our proposed protection based on redundant number representation is particularly flexible, in the sens that it can be implemented for various degrees of protection at various costs
Misoczki, Rafael. "Two Approaches for Achieving Efficient Code-Based Cryptosystems." Phd thesis, Université Pierre et Marie Curie - Paris VI, 2013. http://tel.archives-ouvertes.fr/tel-00931811.
Full textUrvoy, De Portzamparc Frédéric. "Sécurités algébrique et physique en cryptographie fondée sur les codes correcteurs d'erreurs." Thesis, Paris 6, 2015. http://www.theses.fr/2015PA066106/document.
Full textCode-based cryptography, introduced by Robert McEliece in 1978, is a potential candidate to replace the asymetric primitives which are threatened by quantum computers. More generral, it has been considered secure for more than thirty years, and allow very vast encryption primitives. Its major drawback lies in the size of the public keys. For this reason, several variants of the original McEliece scheme with keys easier to store were proposed in the last years.In this thesis, we are interested in variants using alternant codes with symmetries and wild Goppa codes. We study their resistance to algebraic attacks, and reveal sometimes fatal weaknesses. In each case, we show the existence of hidden algebraic structures allowing to describe the secret key with non-linear systems of multivariate equations containing fewer variables then in the previous modellings. Their resolutions with Gröbner bases allow to find the secret keys for numerous instances out of reach until now and proposed for cryptographic purposes. For the alternant codes with symmetries, we show a more fondamental vulnerability of the key size reduction process. Prior to an industrial deployment, it is necessary to evaluate the resistance to physical attacks, which target device executing a primitive. To this purpose, we describe a decryption algorithm of McEliece more resistant than the state-of-the-art.Code-based cryptography, introduced by Robert McEliece in 1978, is a potential candidate to replace the asymetric primitives which are threatened by quantum computers. More generral, it has been considered secure for more than thirty years, and allow very vast encryption primitives. Its major drawback lies in the size of the public keys. For this reason, several variants of the original McEliece scheme with keys easier to store were proposed in the last years.In this thesis, we are interested in variants using alternant codes with symmetries and wild Goppa codes. We study their resistance to algebraic attacks, and reveal sometimes fatal weaknesses. In each case, we show the existence of hidden algebraic structures allowing to describe the secret key with non-linear systems of multivariate equations containing fewer variables then in the previous modellings. Their resolutions with Gröbner bases allow to find the secret keys for numerous instances out of reach until now and proposed for cryptographic purposes. For the alternant codes with symmetries, we show a more fondamental vulnerability of the key size reduction process. Prior to an industrial deployment, it is necessary to evaluate the resistance to physical attacks, which target device executing a primitive. To this purpose, we describe a decryption algorithm of McEliece more resistant than the state-of-the-art
Richmond, Tania. "Implantation sécurisée de protocoles cryptographiques basés sur les codes correcteurs d'erreurs." Thesis, Lyon, 2016. http://www.theses.fr/2016LYSES048/document.
Full textThe first cryptographic protocol based on error-correcting codes was proposed in 1978 by Robert McEliece. Cryptography based on codes is called post-quantum because until now, no algorithm able to attack this kind of protocols in polynomial time, even using a quantum computer, has been proposed. This is in contrast with protocols based on number theory problems like factorization of large numbers, for which efficient Shor's algorithm can be used on quantum computers. Nevertheless, the McEliece cryptosystem security is based not only on mathematical problems. Implementation (in software or hardware) is also very important for its security. Study of side-channel attacks against the McEliece cryptosystem have begun in 2008. Improvements can still be done. In this thesis, we propose new attacks against decryption in the McEliece cryptosystem, used with classical Goppa codes, including corresponding countermeasures. Proposed attacks are based on evaluation of execution time of the algorithm or its power consumption analysis. Associate countermeasures are based on mathematical and algorithmic properties of the underlying algorithm. We show that it is necessary to secure the decryption algorithm by considering it as a whole and not only step by step