| Advanced Encryption Standard (AES). National Institute of Standards and Technology, US Department of Commerce, FIPS 197, 2001. |
.... DES with a classified encryption algorithm that would be made available only in tamper proof hardware, packaged with a protocol that would give law enforcement access: session keys would be transmitted along with the ciphertext, encrypted under a key of which government agencies would have a copy [20]. As the world now knows, Clipper was a failure. Not only did the chip arouse intense public hostility dooming the AT T secure telephone that was the first product to incorporate it but technical flaws emerged too. The key escrow protocol was broken by Blaze [13] while further attacks ....
`Escrowed Encryption Standard', FIPS PUB 185, US Department of Commerce, February 1994
No context found.
Advanced Encryption Standard (AES). National Institute of Standards and Technology, US Department of Commerce, FIPS 197, 2001.
No context found.
`Escrowed Encryption Standard', FIPS PUB 185, US Department of Commerce, February 1994
No context found.
`Escrowed Encryption Standard', FIPS PUB 185, US Department of Commerce, February 1994
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