How We Created the First SHA-1 Collision and What it Means for Hash Security

How We Created the First SHA-1 Collision and What it Means for Hash Security

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SHA-1 cryptanalysis in a nutshell

8 of 29

8 of 29

SHA-1 cryptanalysis in a nutshell

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How We Created the First SHA-1 Collision and What it Means for Hash Security

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  1. 1 Intro
  2. 2 What is a cryptographic hash function?
  3. 3 What are secure hash functions used for?
  4. 4 Second preimage attack
  5. 5 The need for cryptanalysis
  6. 6 The Merkle-Damgård construction
  7. 7 Unrolled SHA-1 compress function
  8. 8 SHA-1 cryptanalysis in a nutshell
  9. 9 Two block collision
  10. 10 Fixed prefix attack (SHA-1)
  11. 11 Carefully choosing prefix to improve attack
  12. 12 Chosen-prefix: MDS SSL certificate forgery
  13. 13 Malware MD5 certificate
  14. 14 Attack feasibility
  15. 15 Attack overview
  16. 16 Smart prefix: JPEG embedded in PDF
  17. 17 Scaling computation
  18. 18 Developing the full collision attack
  19. 19 Making efficient use of GPUs
  20. 20 Phase 2 production rate per step
  21. 21 Computational cost comparison
  22. 22 Counter-cryptanalysis to the rescue!
  23. 23 GIT is using SHA-1 for foreseeable future
  24. 24 Mitigating GIT issues with counter-cryptanalysis
  25. 25 Google scans incoming documents
  26. 26 Why scan files for collision?
  27. 27 Gmail counter-cryptanalysis cost
  28. 28 The future of hash security is diversity
  29. 29 Takeaways

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