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Date: Mon, 03 Apr 2000 18:35:57 -0400
From: David Hamer [EMAIL PROTECTED]
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To: [EMAIL PROTECTED], [EMAIL PROTECTED], [EMAIL PROTECTED],
[EMAIL PROTECTED], [EMAIL PROTECTED], [EMAIL PROTECTED],
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[No real details seem to be available on the cipher. The illustrations
seem to show a fairly standard Feistel style arrangement. --Perry]
TOKYO, March 10, 2000-Nippon Telegraph and Telephone Corporation (NTT)
and Mitsubishi Electric Corporation (Mitsubishi) announced today their joint
Ben Laurie [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
"Arnold G. Reinhold" wrote:
I wonder if you are confusing the length in bits of a PKC key, e.g. a
prime factor of an RSA public key, with the entropy of that private
key. The prime factor may be 512 bits long, but it usually does not
have anyway near 512
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At 01:27 AM 4/4/00 -0700, nobuki nakatuji wrote:
TOKYO, March 10, 2000-Nippon Telegraph and Telephone
Corporation (NTT) and Mitsubishi Electric Corporation
(Mitsubishi) announced today their joint development of
"Camellia," a next-generation symmetric-key
At 01:27 AM 4/4/00 PDT, nobuki nakatuji wrote:
[No real details seem to be available on the cipher. The illustrations
seem to show a fairly standard Feistel style arrangement. --Perry]
They claim Camellia (love that name; someone should do a
'Monica' cipher) takes 10K gates. This
is about