If they ever build such a computer (or 1.000.000 of them) what would that mean for
today's key lengths ?
I am curious how long a computer capable of a septillion operations per second would
take to crack one 128 bit or 256 bit key.
Or a RSA 1024 or 2048 bit key for that matter ...
take
) operations every second.
---
If they ever build such a computer (or 1.000.000 of them) what would
that mean for today's key lengths ?
I am curious how long a computer capable of a septillion operations
per second would take to crack one 128 bit or 256 bit key.
Or a RSA 1024 or 2048 bit key
At 12:16 PM 6/20/01 +0200, Barry Wels wrote:
Hi,
In James Bamford's new book 'Body of Secrets' he claims the NSA is working
on some FAST computers.
http://www.randomhouse.com/features/bamford/book.html
Fantastic book. I read the stuff about using Areceibo for moon-bounce
surveillance
of
.
---
If they ever build such a computer (or 1.000.000 of them) what would that mean for
today's key lengths ?
I am curious how long a computer capable of a septillion operations per second would
take to crack one 128 bit or 256 bit key.
Or a RSA 1024 or 2048 bit key for that matter ...
10^24
In article [EMAIL PROTECTED],
Mike Brodhead [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
take a peek at the chapter on key lengths in Schneier's Applied
Cryptography. it is an entertaining read. in short, he makes the
case that computers as we understand them simply cannot conduct brute
force attacks against
such a computer (or 1.000.000 of them) what would that mean for
today's key lengths ?
I am curious how long a computer capable of a septillion operations per second would
take to crack one 128 bit or 256 bit key.
Or a RSA 1024 or 2048 bit key for that matter ...
Greetings,
Barry