On 05/09/15 11:18, ianG wrote:
Workshop on Elliptic Curve Cryptography Standards
June 11-12, 2015

Agenda now available!

The National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) will host a
Workshop on Elliptic Curve Cryptography Standards at NIST headquarters
in Gaithersburg, MD on June 11-12, 2015.  The workshop will provide a
venue to engage the cryptographic community, including academia,
industry, and government users to discuss possible approaches to promote
the adoption of secure, interoperable and efficient elliptic curve
mechanisms.

I doubt the foremost questions will be addressed:

To which extent NSA influence motivates NIST in advancing the ECC standards?

Can independent academia members present hypothetical mathematical advances (even breakthroughs) that NSA could have made, or could speculatively expect to make, in order for the NSA to provide the US a cryptanalysis advance over the rest of the world (central to NSA mission).

To which extent the table of key size equivalences (between factoring-based cryptosystems and ECC schemes) is biased for a faster adoption of ECC (e.g. it makes sense to move to ECC because the "equivalent" RSA key sizes are inconvenient)?

NIST has been unquestionably useful for the cryptographic community with the AES and ASHA competitions. The outcome of the former is a widely deployed improvement over prior symmetric encryption algorithms. The outcome of the latter appears less attractive for adoption decisions, but the very challenges of an efficient secure hash algorithm seems to be the root cause, and not the NIST competition process.

With ECC, I have less confidence in NIST ability to leverage the cryptographic community contributions.

- Thierry Moreau
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