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Cascade Encryption Revisited

Authors:
Peter Gazi
Ueli Maurer
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URL: http://eprint.iacr.org/2009/093
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Abstract: The security of cascade blockcipher encryption is an important and well-studied problem in theoretical cryptography with practical implications. It is well-known that double encryption improves the security only marginally, leaving triple encryption as the shortest reasonable cascade. In a recent paper, Bellare and Rogaway showed that in the ideal cipher model, triple encryption is significantly more secure than single and double encryption, stating the security of longer cascades as an open question. In this paper, we propose a new lemma on the indistinguishability of systems extending Maurer's theory of random systems. In addition to being of independent interest, it allows us to compactly rephrase Bellare and Rogaway's proof strategy in this framework, thus making the argument more abstract and hence easy to follow. As a result, this allows us to address the security of longer cascades as well as some errors in their paper. Our result implies that for blockciphers with smaller key space than message space (e.g. DES), longer cascades improve the security of the encryption up to a certain limit. This partially answers the open question mentioned above.
BibTeX
@misc{eprint-2009-18187,
  title={Cascade Encryption Revisited},
  booktitle={IACR Eprint archive},
  keywords={secret-key cryptography / cascade encryption, ideal cipher model, random system, indistinguishability},
  url={http://eprint.iacr.org/2009/093},
  note={ peter.gazi@inf.ethz.ch 14298 received 23 Feb 2009},
  author={Peter Gazi and Ueli Maurer},
  year=2009
}