Description
L'exposé comportera deux parties Dans la premiere, on présentera quelques notions fondamentales de théorie de la complexité, illustrés par des exemples très simples. La deuxième partie sera consacrée à la recherche de vecteurs courts dans les réseaux. On presentera des résultats récents, dus a Adleman, Ajtai, Lenstra et d'autres, qui permettent d'évaluer la difficulté de ce problème.<br/> La conclusion portera sur la pertinence cryptographique de cette question.
Prochains exposés
-
Predicting Module-Lattice Reduction
Orateur : Paola de Perthuis - CWI
Is module-lattice reduction better than unstructured lattice reduction? This question was highlighted as `Q8' in the Kyber NIST standardization submission (Avanzi et al., 2021), as potentially affecting the concrete security of Kyber and other module-lattice-based schemes. Foundational works on module-lattice reduction (Lee, Pellet-Mary, Stehlé, and Wallet, ASIACRYPT 2019; Mukherjee and Stephens[…]-
Cryptography
-
-
Attacking the Supersingular Isogeny Problem: From the Delfs–Galbraith algorithm to oriented graphs
Orateur : Arthur Herlédan Le Merdy - COSIC, KU Leuven
The threat of quantum computers motivates the introduction of new hard problems for cryptography.One promising candidate is the Isogeny problem: given two elliptic curves, compute a “nice’’ map between them, called an isogeny.In this talk, we study classical attacks on this problem, specialised to supersingular elliptic curves, on which the security of current isogeny-based cryptography relies. In[…]-
Cryptography
-