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hpr1640 :: Symmetric vs. Asymmetric Encryption

This episode looks the two kinds of encryption keys, and why to use each one.

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Hosted by Ahuka on Friday, 2014-11-14 is flagged as Clean and is released under a CC-BY-SA license.
symmetric, asymmetric, encryption. 2.
The show is available on the Internet Archive at: https://archive.org/details/hpr1640

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Duration: 00:20:31

Privacy and Security.

In this open series, you can contribute shows that are on the topic of Privacy and Security

Previously we looked at Public Key encryption, which is also called Asymmetric Encryption because it uses two different keys for the encryption and decryption. This allows us to solve one of the biggest problems in secure encrypted communication, which is key distribution. Because the public key can be freely distributed, you dont need to maintain security around the process of distributing keys. Symmetric encryption, on the other hand, relies on a shared key that is used for both encryption and decryption. An example of this is the one-time pad, where you printed up a pad of paper that contained various keys, and each one was used only once. As long as no one can get the key, it is unbreakable, but the big weakness was key distribution. How do you get the one-time pad into the hands of your correspondent? And you would need to do this with separate one-time pads for each person you needed to communicate with. These are the kinds of problems that made asymmetric encryption so popular. Finally, symmetric key crypto cannot be used to reliably create a digital signature. The reason should be clear. If I have the same secret key you used to sign a message, I can alter the message, use the shared secret key myself, and claim you sent it. - For more go to https://www.zwilnik.com/?page_id=650

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Comment #1 posted on 2014-11-18 08:06:10 by johanv

Thank you for explaining this

Hi,
Thank you for this informative episode. Now I actually have a clue about how these encryption algorithms actually work.

Comment #2 posted on 2014-11-18 20:03:40 by Kevin O'Brien

You're welcome

Glad you liked it johanv. They are fun to do, and I am working on some more.

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