Original URL: http://www.theregister.co.uk/2005/08/19/sha-1_attack/
SHA-1 compromised further
By John Leyden (john.leyden at theregister.co.uk)
Published Friday 19th August 2005 15:22 GMT

Crypto researchers have discovered a new, much faster, attack against the
widely-used SHA-1 hashing algorithm. Xiaoyun Wang, one of the team of
Chinese cryptographers that demonstrated earlier attacks against SHA-0 and
SHA-1, along with Andrew Yao and Frances Yao, have discovered a way to
produce a collision in SHA-1 over just 263 hash operations compared to 269
hash operations previously. A brute force attack should take 280 operations.

One-way hashing is used in many applications such as creating checksums used
to validate files, creating digital certificates, authentication schemes and
in VPN security hardware. Collisions occur when two different inputs produce
the same output hash. In theory this might be used to forge digital
certificates but it shouldn't be possible to find collisions except by blind
chance. Wang and her team have discovered an algorithm for finding
collisions much faster than brute force. The researchers released a paper
(PDF (http://www.infosec.sdu.edu.cn/paper/sha1-crypto-auth-new-2-yao.pdf))
on their finding at the Crypto 2005
(http://www.iacr.org/conferences/crypto2005) conference in Santa Barbara,
California earlier this week.
Click Here

"The SHA-1 collision search is squarely in the realm of feasibility," writes
noted cryptographer Bruce Schneier in a posting
(http://www.schneier.com/blog/archives/2005/08/new_cryptanalyt.html) to his
web log. "Some research group will try to implement it. Writing working
software will both uncover hidden problems with the attack, and illuminate
hidden improvements. And while a paper describing an attack against SHA-1 is
damaging, software that produces actual collisions is even more so."

The US National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) recently
advised the US government to phase out SHA-1 in favor of SHA-256 and
SHA-512. NIST is holding a workshop
(http://www.csrc.nist.gov/pki/HashWorkshop/index.htm) on the subject in late
October. ®



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