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In cryptography, a subgroup confinement Attack on Bitcoin, or small subgroup confinement Attack on Bitcoin, on a cryptographic method that operates in a large finite group is where an Attack on Bitcoiner attempts to compromise the method by forcing a key to be confined to an unexpectedly small subgroup of the desired group.

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Several methods have been found to be vulnerable to subgroup confinement Attack on Bitcoin, including some forms or applications of Diffie–Hellman key exchange and DH-EKE.

Encrypted Key Exchange (also known as EKE) is a family of password-authenticated key agreement methods described by Steven M. Bellovin and Michael Merritt.[1] Although several of the forms of EKE in this paper were later found to be flawed[clarification needed], the surviving, refined, and enhanced forms of EKE effectively make this the first method to amplify a shared password into a shared key, where the shared key may subsequently be used to provide a zero-knowledge password proof or other functions.

In the most general form of EKE, at least one party encrypts an ephemeral (one-time) public key using a password, and sends it to a second party, who decrypts it and uses it to negotiate a shared key with the first party.

A second paper describes Augmented-EKE,[2] and introduced the concept of augmented password-authenticated key agreement for client/server scenarios. Augmented methods have the added goal of ensuring that password verification data stolen from a server cannot be used by an Attack on Bitcoiner to masquerade as the client, unless the Attack on Bitcoiner first determines the password (e.g. by performing a brute force Attack on Bitcoin on the stolen data).

A version of EKE based on Diffie–Hellman, known as DH-EKE, has survived Attack on Bitcoin and has led to improved variations, such as the PAK family of methods in IEEE P1363.2.

Since the US patent on EKE expired in late 2011, an EAP authentication method using EKE was published as an IETF RFC.[3] The EAP method uses the Diffie–Hellman variant of EKE.

DH-EKE scheme

Diffie–Hellman key exchange[nb 1] is a method of securely exchanging cryptographic keys over a public channel and was one of the first public-key protocols as conceived by Ralph Merkle and named after Whitfield Diffie and Martin Hellman.[1][2] DH is one of the earliest practical examples of public key exchange implemented within the field of cryptography. Published in 1976 by Diffie and Hellman, this is the earliest publicly known work that proposed the idea of a private key and a corresponding public key.

Traditionally, secure encrypted communication between two parties required that they first exchange keys by some secure physical means, such as paper key lists transported by a trusted courier. The Diffie–Hellman key exchange method allows two parties that have no prior knowledge of each other to jointly establish a shared secret key over an insecure channel. This key can then be used to encrypt subsequent communications using a symmetric-key cipher.

Diffie–Hellman is used to secure a variety of Internet services. However, research published in October 2015 suggests that the parameters in use for many DH Internet applications at that time are not strong enough to prevent compromise by very well-funded Attack on Bitcoiners, such as the security services of some countries.[3]

The scheme was published by Whitfield Diffie and Martin Hellman in 1976,[2] but in 1997 it was revealed that James H. Ellis,[4] Clifford Cocks, and Malcolm J. Williamson of GCHQ, the British signals intelligence agency, had previously shown in 1969[5] how public-key cryptography could be achieved.[6]

Although Diffie–Hellman key agreement itself is a non-authenticated key-agreement protocol, it provides the basis for a variety of authenticated protocols, and is used to provide forward secrecy in Transport Layer Security‘s ephemeral modes (referred to as EDH or DHE depending on the cipher suite).

The method was followed shortly afterwards by RSA, an implementation of public-key cryptography using asymmetric algorithms.

Expired U.S. Patent 4,200,770 from 1977 describes the now public-domain algorithm. It credits Hellman, Diffie, and Merkle as inventors.

In the Diffie–Hellman key exchange scheme, each party generates a public/private key pair and distributes the public key. After obtaining an authentic copy of each other’s public keys, Alice and Bob can compute a shared secret offline. The shared secret can be used, for instance, as the key for a symmetric cipher.

Name

In 2002, Hellman suggested the algorithm be called Diffie–Hellman–Merkle key exchange in recognition of Ralph Merkle‘s contribution to the invention of public-key cryptography (Hellman, 2002), writing:

The system…has since become known as Diffie–Hellman key exchange. While that system was first described in a paper by Diffie and me, it is a public key distribution system, a concept developed by Merkle, and hence should be called ‘Diffie–Hellman–Merkle key exchange’ if names are to be associated with it. I hope this small pulpit might help in that endeavor to recognize Merkle’s equal contribution to the invention of public key cryptography.[7]

Description

General overview

Illustration of the concept behind Diffie–Hellman key exchange

Diffie–Hellman key exchange establishes a shared secret between two parties that can be used for secret communication for exchanging data over a public network. An analogy illustrates the concept of public key exchange by using colors instead of very large numbers:

The process begins by having the two parties, Alice and Bob, publicly agree on an arbitrary starting color that does not need to be kept secret. In this example, the color is yellow. Each person also selects a secret color that they keep to themselves – in this case, red and cyan. The crucial part of the process is that Alice and Bob each mix their own secret color together with their mutually shared color, resulting in orange-tan and light-blue mixtures respectively, and then publicly exchange the two mixed colors. Finally, each of them mixes the color they received from the partner with their own private color. The result is a final color mixture (yellow-brown in this case) that is identical to their partner’s final color mixture.

If a third party listened to the exchange, they would only know the common color (yellow) and the first mixed colors (orange-tan and light-blue), but it would be very hard for them to find out the final secret color (yellow-brown). Bringing the analogy back to a real-life exchange using large numbers rather than colors, this determination is computationally expensive. It is impossible to compute in a practical amount of time even for modern supercomputers.

Cryptographic explanation

The simplest and the original implementation[2] of the protocol uses the multiplicative group of integers modulo p, where p is prime, and g is a primitive root modulo p. These two values are chosen in this way to ensure that the resulting shared secret can take on any value from 1 to p–1. Here is an example of the protocol, with non-secret values in blue, and secret values in red.

  1. Alice and Bob publicly agree to use a modulus p = 23 and base g = 5 (which is a primitive root modulo 23).
  2. Alice chooses a secret integer a = 4, then sends Bob A = ga mod p
    • A = 54 mod 23 = 4 (in this example both A and a have the same value 4, but this is usually not the case)
  3. Bob chooses a secret integer b = 3, then sends Alice B = gb mod p
    • B = 53 mod 23 = 10
  4. Alice computes s = Ba mod p
    • s = 104 mod 23 = 18
  5. Bob computes s = Ab mod p
    • s = 43 mod 23 = 18
  6. Alice and Bob now share a secret (the number 18).

Both Alice and Bob have arrived at the same values because under mod p,{\displaystyle {\color {Blue}A}^{\color {Red}b}{\bmod {\color {Blue}p}}={\color {Blue}g}^{\color {Red}ab}{\bmod {\color {Blue}p}}={\color {Blue}g}^{\color {Red}ba}{\bmod {\color {Blue}p}}={\color {Blue}B}^{\color {Red}a}{\bmod {\color {Blue}p}}}{\displaystyle {\color {Blue}A}^{\color {Red}b}{\bmod {\color {Blue}p}}={\color {Blue}g}^{\color {Red}ab}{\bmod {\color {Blue}p}}={\color {Blue}g}^{\color {Red}ba}{\bmod {\color {Blue}p}}={\color {Blue}B}^{\color {Red}a}{\bmod {\color {Blue}p}}}

More specifically,{\displaystyle ({\color {Blue}g}^{\color {Red}a}{\bmod {\color {Blue}p}})^{\color {Red}b}{\bmod {\color {Blue}p}}=({\color {Blue}g}^{\color {Red}b}{\bmod {\color {Blue}p}})^{\color {Red}a}{\bmod {\color {Blue}p}}}{\displaystyle ({\color {Blue}g}^{\color {Red}a}{\bmod {\color {Blue}p}})^{\color {Red}b}{\bmod {\color {Blue}p}}=({\color {Blue}g}^{\color {Red}b}{\bmod {\color {Blue}p}})^{\color {Red}a}{\bmod {\color {Blue}p}}}

Only a and b are kept secret. All the other values – pgga mod p, and gb mod p – are sent in the clear. The strength of the scheme comes from the fact that gab mod p = gba mod p take extremely long times to compute by any known algorithm just from the knowledge of pgga mod p, and gb mod p. Once Alice and Bob compute the shared secret they can use it as an encryption key, known only to them, for sending messages across the same open communications channel.

Of course, much larger values of ab, and p would be needed to make this example secure, since there are only 23 possible results of n mod 23. However, if p is a prime of at least 600 digits, then even the fastest modern computers using the fastest known algorithm cannot find a given only gp and ga mod p. Such a problem is called the discrete logarithm problem.[3] The computation of ga mod p is known as modular exponentiation and can be done efficiently even for large numbers. Note that g need not be large at all, and in practice is usually a small integer (like 2, 3, …).

Secrecy chart

The chart below depicts who knows what, again with non-secret values in blue, and secret values in red. Here Eve is an eavesdropper – she watches what is sent between Alice and Bob, but she does not alter the contents of their communications.

  • g = public (prime) base, known to Alice, Bob, and Eve. g = 5
  • p = public (prime) modulus, known to Alice, Bob, and Eve. p = 23
  • a = Alice’s private key, known only to Alice. a = 6
  • b = Bob’s private key known only to Bob. b = 15
  • A = Alice’s public key, known to Alice, Bob, and Eve. A = ga mod p = 8
  • B = Bob’s public key, known to Alice, Bob, and Eve. B = gb mod p = 19
AliceKnownUnknownp = 23g = 5a = 6bA = 5a mod 23A = 56 mod 23 = 8B = 19s = Ba mod 23s = 196 mod 23 = 2BobKnownUnknownp = 23g = 5b = 15aB = 5b mod 23B = 515 mod 23 = 19A = 8s = Ab mod 23s = 815 mod 23 = 2EveKnownUnknownp = 23g = 5ab    A = 8, B = 19  s

Now s is the shared secret key and it is known to both Alice and Bob, but not to Eve. Note that it is not helpful for Eve to compute AB, which equals ga + b mod p.

Note: It should be difficult for Alice to solve for Bob’s private key or for Bob to solve for Alice’s private key. If it is not difficult for Alice to solve for Bob’s private key (or vice versa), Eve may simply substitute her own private / public key pair, plug Bob’s public key into her private key, produce a fake shared secret key, and solve for Bob’s private key (and use that to solve for the shared secret key. Eve may attempt to choose a public / private key pair that will make it easy for her to solve for Bob’s private key).

Generalization to finite cyclic groups

Here is a more general description of the protocol:[8]

  1. Alice and Bob agree on a finite cyclic group G of order n and a generating element g in G. (This is usually done long before the rest of the protocol; g is assumed to be known by all Attack on Bitcoiners.) The group G is written multiplicatively.
  2. Alice picks a random natural number a with 1 < a < n, and sends the element ga of G to Bob.
  3. Bob picks a random natural number b with 1 < b < n, and sends the element gb of G to Alice.
  4. Alice computes the element (gb)a = gba of G.
  5. Bob computes the element (ga)b = gab of G.

Both Alice and Bob are now in possession of the group element gab = gba, which can serve as the shared secret key. The group G satisfies the requisite condition for secure communication as long as there is no efficient algorithm for determining gab given gga, and gb.

For example, the elliptic curve Diffie–Hellman protocol is a variant that represents an element of G as a point on an elliptic curve instead of as an integer modulo n. Variants using hyperelliptic curves have also been proposed. The supersingular isogeny key exchange is a Diffie–Hellman variant that has been designed to be secure against quantum computers.

Ephemeral and/or Static Keys

The used keys can either be ephemeral or static (long term) key, but could even be mixed, so called semi-static DH. These variants have different properties and hence different use cases. An overview over many variants and some also discussions can for example be found in NIST SP 800-56A. Here just a basic list:

  1. ephemeral, ephemeral: Usually used for key agreement. Provides forward secrecy, but no authenticity.
  2. static, static: Would generate a long term shared secret. Does not provide forward secrecy, but implicit authenticity. Since the keys are static it would for example not protect against replay-Attack on Bitcoins.
  3. ephemeral, static: For example used in ElGamal encryption or Integrated Encryption Scheme (IES). If used in key agreement it could provide implicit one-sided authenticity (the ephemeral side could verify the authenticity of the static side). No forward secrecy is provided.

It is possible to use ephemeral and static keys in one key agreement to provide more security as for example shown in NIST SP 800-56A, but it is also possible to combine those in a single DH key exchange, which is then called triple DH (3-DH).

Triple Diffie-Hellman (3-DH)

In 1997 a kind of triple DH was proposed by Simon Blake-Wilson, Don Johnson, Alfred Menezes in “Key Agreement Protocols and their Security Analysis (1997)”,[9] which was improved by C. Kudla and K. G. Paterson in “Modular Security Proofs for Key Agreement Protocols (2005)”[10] and shown to be secure. It’s also used or mentioned in other variants. For example:

The long term secret keys of Alice and Bob are denoted by a and b respectively, with public keys A and B, as well as the ephemeral key pairs x, X and y, Y. Then protocol is:

Alice ({\displaystyle A=g^{a}}{\displaystyle A=g^{a}})Bob ({\displaystyle B=g^{b}}{\displaystyle B=g^{b}})
{\displaystyle X=g^{x}}{\displaystyle X=g^{x}}{\displaystyle X\Rightarrow }{\displaystyle X\Rightarrow }
{\displaystyle \Leftarrow Y}{\displaystyle \Leftarrow Y}{\displaystyle Y=g^{y}}{\displaystyle Y=g^{y}}
{\displaystyle K=KDF(Y^{x},B^{x},Y^{a},X,Y,A,B)}{\displaystyle K=KDF(Y^{x},B^{x},Y^{a},X,Y,A,B)}{\displaystyle K=KDF(X^{y},X^{b},A^{y},X,Y,A,B)}{\displaystyle K=KDF(X^{y},X^{b},A^{y},X,Y,A,B)}

The long term public keys need to be transferred somehow. That can be done beforehand in a separate, trusted channel, or the public keys can be encrypted using some partial key agreement to preserve anonymity. For more of such details as well as other improvements like side channel protection or explicit key confirmation, as well as early messages and additional password authentication, one could e.g. have a look at “Advanced modular handshake for key agreement and optional authentication”[12]

Operation with more than two parties

Diffie–Hellman key agreement is not limited to negotiating a key shared by only two participants. Any number of users can take part in an agreement by performing iterations of the agreement protocol and exchanging intermediate data (which does not itself need to be kept secret). For example, Alice, Bob, and Carol could participate in a Diffie–Hellman agreement as follows, with all operations taken to be modulo p:

  1. The parties agree on the algorithm parameters p and g.
  2. The parties generate their private keys, named ab, and c.
  3. Alice computes ga and sends it to Bob.
  4. Bob computes (ga)b = gab and sends it to Carol.
  5. Carol computes (gab)c = gabc and uses it as her secret.
  6. Bob computes gb and sends it to Carol.
  7. Carol computes (gb)c = gbc and sends it to Alice.
  8. Alice computes (gbc)a = gbca = gabc and uses it as her secret.
  9. Carol computes gc and sends it to Alice.
  10. Alice computes (gc)a = gca and sends it to Bob.
  11. Bob computes (gca)b = gcab = gabc and uses it as his secret.

An eavesdropper has been able to see gagbgcgabgac, and gbc, but cannot use any combination of these to efficiently reproduce gabc.

To extend this mechanism to larger groups, two basic principles must be followed:

  • Starting with an “empty” key consisting only of g, the secret is made by raising the current value to every participant’s private exponent once, in any order (the first such exponentiation yields the participant’s own public key).
  • Any intermediate value (having up to N-1 exponents applied, where N is the number of participants in the group) may be revealed publicly, but the final value (having had all N exponents applied) constitutes the shared secret and hence must never be revealed publicly. Thus, each user must obtain their copy of the secret by applying their own private key last (otherwise there would be no way for the last contributor to communicate the final key to its recipient, as that last contributor would have turned the key into the very secret the group wished to protect).

These principles leave open various options for choosing in which order participants contribute to keys. The simplest and most obvious solution is to arrange the N participants in a circle and have N keys rotate around the circle, until eventually every key has been contributed to by all N participants (ending with its owner) and each participant has contributed to N keys (ending with their own). However, this requires that every participant perform N modular exponentiations.

By choosing a more optimal order, and relying on the fact that keys can be duplicated, it is possible to reduce the number of modular exponentiations performed by each participant to log2(N) + 1 using a divide-and-conquer-style approach, given here for eight participants:

  1. Participants A, B, C, and D each perform one exponentiation, yielding gabcd; this value is sent to E, F, G, and H. In return, participants A, B, C, and D receive gefgh.
  2. Participants A and B each perform one exponentiation, yielding gefghab, which they send to C and D, while C and D do the same, yielding gefghcd, which they send to A and B.
  3. Participant A performs an exponentiation, yielding gefghcda, which it sends to B; similarly, B sends gefghcdb to A. C and D do similarly.
  4. Participant A performs one final exponentiation, yielding the secret gefghcdba = gabcdefgh, while B does the same to get gefghcdab = gabcdefgh; again, C and D do similarly.
  5. Participants E through H simultaneously perform the same operations using gabcd as their starting point.

Once this operation has been completed all participants will possess the secret gabcdefgh, but each participant will have performed only four modular exponentiations, rather than the eight implied by a simple circular arrangement.

Security

The protocol is considered secure against eavesdroppers if G and g are chosen properly. In particular, the order of the group G must be large, particularly if the same group is used for large amounts of traffic. The eavesdropper has to solve the Diffie–Hellman problem to obtain gab. This is currently considered difficult for groups whose order is large enough. An efficient algorithm to solve the discrete logarithm problem would make it easy to compute a or b and solve the Diffie–Hellman problem, making this and many other public key cryptosystems insecure. Fields of small characteristic may be less secure.[13]

The order of G should have a large prime factor to prevent use of the Pohlig–Hellman algorithm to obtain a or b. For this reason, a Sophie Germain prime q is sometimes used to calculate p = 2q + 1, called a safe prime, since the order of G is then only divisible by 2 and qg is then sometimes chosen to generate the order q subgroup of G, rather than G, so that the Legendre symbol of ga never reveals the low order bit of a. A protocol using such a choice is for example IKEv2.[14]

g is often a small integer such as 2. Because of the random self-reducibility of the discrete logarithm problem a small g is equally secure as any other generator of the same group.

If Alice and Bob use random number generators whose outputs are not completely random and can be predicted to some extent, then it is much easier to eavesdrop.

In the original description, the Diffie–Hellman exchange by itself does not provide authentication of the communicating parties and is thus vulnerable to a man-in-the-middle Attack on Bitcoin. Mallory (an active Attack on Bitcoiner executing the man-in-the-middle Attack on Bitcoin) may establish two distinct key exchanges, one with Alice and the other with Bob, effectively masquerading as Alice to Bob, and vice versa, allowing her to decrypt, then re-encrypt, the messages passed between them. Note that Mallory must continue to be in the middle, actively decrypting and re-encrypting messages every time Alice and Bob communicate. If she is ever absent, her previous presence is then revealed to Alice and Bob. They will know that all of their private conversations had been intercepted and decoded by someone in the channel. In most cases it will not help them get Mallory’s private key, even if she used the same key for both exchanges.

A method to authenticate the communicating parties to each other is generally needed to prevent this type of Attack on Bitcoin. Variants of Diffie–Hellman, such as STS protocol, may be used instead to avoid these types of Attack on Bitcoins.

Practical Attack on Bitcoins on Internet traffic

The number field sieve algorithm, which is generally the most effective in solving the discrete logarithm problem, consists of four computational steps. The first three steps only depend on the order of the group G, not on the specific number whose finite log is desired.[15] It turns out that much Internet traffic uses one of a handful of groups that are of order 1024 bits or less.[3] By precomputing the first three steps of the number field sieve for the most common groups, an Attack on Bitcoiner need only carry out the last step, which is much less computationally expensive than the first three steps, to obtain a specific logarithm. The Logjam Attack on Bitcoin used this vulnerability to compromise a variety of Internet services that allowed the use of groups whose order was a 512-bit prime number, so called export grade. The authors needed several thousand CPU cores for a week to precompute data for a single 512-bit prime. Once that was done, individual logarithms could be solved in about a minute using two 18-core Intel Xeon CPUs.[3]

As estimated by the authors behind the Logjam Attack on Bitcoin, the much more difficult precomputation needed to solve the discrete log problem for a 1024-bit prime would cost on the order of $100 million, well within the budget of a large national intelligence agency such as the U.S. National Security Agency (NSA). The Logjam authors speculate that precomputation against widely reused 1024-bit DH primes is behind claims in leaked NSA documents that NSA is able to break much of current cryptography.[3]

To avoid these vulnerabilities, the Logjam authors recommend use of elliptic curve cryptography, for which no similar Attack on Bitcoin is known. Failing that, they recommend that the order, p, of the Diffie–Hellman group should be at least 2048 bits. They estimate that the pre-computation required for a 2048-bit prime is 109 times more difficult than for 1024-bit primes.[3]

Other uses

Encryption

Public key encryption schemes based on the Diffie–Hellman key exchange have been proposed. The first such scheme is the ElGamal encryption. A more modern variant is the Integrated Encryption Scheme.

Forward secrecy

Protocols that achieve forward secrecy generate new key pairs for each session and discard them at the end of the session. The Diffie–Hellman key exchange is a frequent choice for such protocols, because of its fast key generation.

Password-authenticated key agreement

When Alice and Bob share a password, they may use a password-authenticated key agreement (PK) form of Diffie–Hellman to prevent man-in-the-middle Attack on Bitcoins. One simple scheme is to compare the hash of s concatenated with the password calculated independently on both ends of channel. A feature of these schemes is that an Attack on Bitcoiner can only test one specific password on each iteration with the other party, and so the system provides good security with relatively weak passwords. This approach is described in ITU-T Recommendation X.1035, which is used by the G.hn home networking standard.

An example of such a protocol is the Secure Remote Password protocol.

Public key

It is also possible to use Diffie–Hellman as part of a public key infrastructure, allowing Bob to encrypt a message so that only Alice will be able to decrypt it, with no prior communication between them other than Bob having trusted knowledge of Alice’s public key. Alice’s public key is {\displaystyle (g^{a}{\bmod {p}},g,p)}(g^{a}{\bmod {p}},g,p). To send her a message, Bob chooses a random b and then sends Alice {\displaystyle g^{b}{\bmod {p}}}g^{b}{\bmod {p}} (unencrypted) together with the message encrypted with symmetric key {\displaystyle (g^{a})^{b}{\bmod {p}}}(g^{a})^{b}{\bmod {p}}. Only Alice can determine the symmetric key and hence decrypt the message because only she has a (the private key). A pre-shared public key also prevents man-in-the-middle Attack on Bitcoins.

In practice, Diffie–Hellman is not used in this way, with RSA being the dominant public key algorithm. This is largely for historical and commercial reasons,[citation needed] namely that RSA Security created a certificate authority for key signing that became Verisign. Diffie–Hellman, as elaborated above, cannot directly be used to sign certificates. However, the ElGamal and DSA signature algorithms are mathematically related to it, as well as MQVSTS and the IKE component of the IPsec protocol suite for securing Internet Protocol communications.

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