https://www.quantamagazine.org/researchers-identify-master-problem-underlying-all-cryptography-20220406/


In 1868, the mathematician Charles Dodgson (better known as Lewis Carroll) 
proclaimed that an encryption scheme called the Vigenère cipher was 
“unbreakable.” He had no proof, but he had compelling reasons for his belief, 
since mathematicians had been trying unsuccessfully to break the cipher for 
more than three centuries.

There was just one small problem: A German infantry officer named Friedrich 
Kasiski had, in fact, broken it five years earlier, in a book that garnered 
little notice at the time.

Cryptographers have been playing this game of cat and mouse, creating and 
breaking ciphers, for as long as people have been sending secret information. 
“For thousands of years, people [have been] trying to figure out, ‘Can we break 
the cycle?’” said Rafael Pass, a cryptographer at Cornell Tech and Cornell 
University.

Five decades ago, cryptographers took a huge step in this direction. They 
showed that it’s possible to create provably secure ciphers if you have access 
to a single ingredient: a “one-way function,” something that’s easy to carry 
out but hard to reverse. Since then, researchers have devised a wide array of 
candidate one-way functions, from simple operations based on multiplication to 
more complicated geometric or logarithmic procedures.

Today, the internet protocols for tasks like transmitting credit card numbers 
and digital signatures depend on these functions. “Most of the crypto that is 
used in the real world is something that can be based on one-way functions,” 
said Yuval Ishai, a cryptographer at the Technion in Haifa, Israel.

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