Cryptographers chosen for NIST contest

A competition to find a replacement for one of the gold-standard computer security algorithms used in almost all secure, online transactions just heated up.

The government looked for, and found, a few good algorithms. Specifically, the National Institute of Standards and Technology is about to conclude a competition for a new way to secure online transactions. The current encryption algorithm was considered safe, until a Chinese computer expert exposed weaknesses back in 2005. That algorithm, known as SHA-1, is still in use. Its cousin, SHA-2, has some of the same weaknesses. New Scientist.com reports, NIST received 64 entries. It narrowed them down to five finalists. Now the agency will pit those five against crypo-analysts, who will attempt to break the algorithms. The winner will be selected in 2012. That new standard will be known as, you guessed it, SHA-3.

This story is part of Federal News Radio’s daily Cybersecurity Update brought to you by Tripwire. For more cybersecurity news, click here.

Copyright © 2024 Federal News Network. All rights reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.

    Joint Chiefs Chairman

    Though the Defense Department managed to go unscathed through the Crowdstrike outage, it remains on the alert

    Read more
    USPS, EV, USPS electric vehicles

    The road to electrifying America’s personal vehicles starts with the USPS EV fleet

    Read more
    Congress, budget, budget cut, spending cuts, Capitol, Congress, federal budget

    Congress tackles spending, policy and candidate protections on the road to the August recess

    Read more