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Key Management and Distribution: Cryptographic, Protocol, & Management Issues

This document discusses key management and distribution. It covers symmetric and public key schemes, and issues with distributing secret keys between parties. It also examines alternatives for distributing public keys, including through announcement, directories, authorities, and certificates. X.509 certificates and PKIX standards for authentication and management in public key infrastructures are also summarized.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
51 views33 pages

Key Management and Distribution: Cryptographic, Protocol, & Management Issues

This document discusses key management and distribution. It covers symmetric and public key schemes, and issues with distributing secret keys between parties. It also examines alternatives for distributing public keys, including through announcement, directories, authorities, and certificates. X.509 certificates and PKIX standards for authentication and management in public key infrastructures are also summarized.

Uploaded by

sunny
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Key Management and

Distribution
 topicsof cryptographic key management /
key distribution are complex
 cryptographic, protocol, & management issues
 symmetric schemes require both parties to
share a common secret key
 public key schemes require parties to
acquire valid public keys
 have concerns with doing both
Key Distribution
 symmetric schemes require both parties to
share a common secret key
 issue is how to securely distribute this key
 whilst protecting it from others
 frequent key changes can be desirable
 often secure system failure due to a break
in the key distribution scheme
Key Distribution
 given parties A and B have various key
distribution alternatives:
1. A can select key and physically deliver to B
2. third party can select & deliver key to A & B
3. if A & B have communicated previously can
use previous key to encrypt a new key
4. if A & B have secure communications with a
third party C, C can relay key between A & B
Key Distribution Task
Key Hierarchy
 typically
have a hierarchy of keys
 session key
 temporary key
 used for encryption of data between users
 for one logical session then discarded
 master key
 used to encrypt session keys
 shared by user & key distribution center
Key Hierarchy
Key Distribution Scenario
Key Distribution Issues
 hierarchies of KDC’s required for large
networks, but must trust each other
 session key lifetimes should be limited for
greater security
 use of automatic key distribution on behalf
of users, but must trust system
 use of decentralized key distribution
 controlling key usage
Symmetric Key Distribution
Using Public Keys
 public key cryptosystems are inefficient
 so almost never use for direct data encryption
 rather use to encrypt secret keys for distribution
Simple Secret Key Distribution
 Merkle proposed this very simple scheme
 allows secure communications
 no keys before/after exist
Man-in-the-Middle Attack
 thisvery simple scheme is vulnerable to
an active man-in-the-middle attack
Secret Key Distribution with
Confidentiality and
Authentication
Hybrid Key Distribution
 retain use of private-key KDC
 shares secret master key with each user
 distributes session key using master key
 public-key used to distribute master keys
 especially useful with widely distributed users
 rationale
 performance
 backward compatibility
Distribution of Public Keys
 can be considered as using one of:
 public announcement
 publicly available directory
 public-key authority
 public-key certificates
Public Announcement
 users
distribute public keys to recipients or
broadcast to community at large
 eg. append PGP keys to email messages or
post to news groups or email list
 major weakness is forgery
 anyone can create a key claiming to be
someone else and broadcast it
 until forgery is discovered can masquerade as
claimed user
Publicly Available Directory
 can obtain greater security by registering
keys with a public directory
 directory must be trusted with properties:
 contains {name,public-key} entries
 participants register securely with directory
 participants can replace key at any time
 directory is periodically published
 directory can be accessed electronically
 still vulnerable to tampering or forgery
Public-Key Authority
 improve security by tightening control over
distribution of keys from directory
 has properties of directory
 and requires users to know public key for
the directory
 then users interact with directory to obtain
any desired public key securely
 does require real-time access to directory
when keys are needed
 may be vulnerable to tampering
Public-Key Authority
Public-Key Certificates
 certificates allow key exchange without
real-time access to public-key authority
 a certificate binds identity to public key
 usually with other info such as period of
validity, rights of use etc
 with all contents signed by a trusted
Public-Key or Certificate Authority (CA)
 can be verified by anyone who knows the
public-key authorities public-key
Public-Key Certificates
X.509 Authentication Service
 part of CCITT X.500 directory service standards
 distributed servers maintaining user info database
 defines framework for authentication services
 directory may store public-key certificates
 with public key of user signed by certification authority
 also defines authentication protocols
 uses public-key crypto & digital signatures
 algorithms not standardised, but RSA recommended
 X.509 certificates are widely used
 have 3 versions
X.509
Certificate
Use
X.509 Certificates
 issued by a Certification Authority (CA), containing:
 version V (1, 2, or 3)
 serial number SN (unique within CA) identifying certificate
 signature algorithm identifier AI
 issuer X.500 name CA)
 period of validity TA (from - to dates)
 subject X.500 name A (name of owner)
 subject public-key info Ap (algorithm, parameters, key)
 issuer unique identifier (v2+)
 subject unique identifier (v2+)
 extension fields (v3)
 signature (of hash of all fields in certificate)
 notation CA<<A>> denotes certificate for A signed by CA
X.509 Certificates
Obtaining a Certificate
 any user with access to CA can get any
certificate from it
 only the CA can modify a certificate
 because cannot be forged, certificates can
be placed in a public directory
CA Hierarchy
 if both users share a common CA then they are
assumed to know its public key
 otherwise CA's must form a hierarchy
 use certificates linking members of hierarchy to
validate other CA's
 each CA has certificates for clients (forward) and
parent (backward)
 each client trusts parents certificates
 enable verification of any certificate from one CA
by users of all other CAs in hierarchy
CA Hierarchy Use
Certificate Revocation
 certificates have a period of validity
 may need to revoke before expiry, eg:
1. user's private key is compromised
2. user is no longer certified by this CA
3. CA's certificate is compromised
 CA’s maintain list of revoked certificates
 the Certificate Revocation List (CRL)
 users should check certificates with CA’s CRL
X.509 Version 3
 has been recognised that additional
information is needed in a certificate
 email/URL, policy details, usage constraints
 ratherthan explicitly naming new fields
defined a general extension method
 extensions consist of:
 extension identifier
 criticality indicator
 extension value
Certificate Extensions
 key and policy information
 convey info about subject & issuer keys, plus
indicators of certificate policy
 certificate subject and issuer attributes
 support alternative names, in alternative
formats for certificate subject and/or issuer
 certificate path constraints
 allow constraints on use of certificates by
other CA’s
Public Key Infrastructure
PKIX Management
 functions:
 registration
 initialization
 certification
 key pair recovery
 key pair update
 revocation request
 cross certification
 protocols: CMP, CMC
Summary
 have considered:
 symmetric key distribution using symmetric
encryption
 symmetric key distribution using public-key
encryption
 distribution of public keys
• announcement, directory, authrority, CA
 X.509 authentication and certificates
 public key infrastructure (PKIX)

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