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Advanced Encryption Standard (AES). National Institute of Standards and Technology, US Department of Commerce, FIPS 197, 2001.

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Problems with the GCHQ Protocol for Securing the British.. - Anderson   (Correct)

.... 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


Network Security and Secure Applications - Kruegel (2004)   (Correct)

No context found.

Advanced Encryption Standard (AES). National Institute of Standards and Technology, US Department of Commerce, FIPS 197, 2001.


The GCHQ Protocol and Its Problems - Anderson, Roe (1997)   (4 citations)  (Correct)

No context found.

`Escrowed Encryption Standard', FIPS PUB 185, US Department of Commerce, February 1994


The GCHQ Protocol and its Problems - Anderson, Roe (1997)   (4 citations)  (Correct)

No context found.

`Escrowed Encryption Standard', FIPS PUB 185, US Department of Commerce, February 1994

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