Summary

The main goal of the course is to introduce basic notions from public key cryptography (PKC) as well as basic number-theoretic methods and algorithms for cryptanalysis of protocols and schemes based on PKC.


Content

Basic notions and algorithms from public key cryptography such as RSA, ElGamal, key exchange protocols, zero knowledge proofs. Topics will include:

  • modular and finite field arithmetic
  • primality testing
  • integer factorization algorithms
  • index calculus and discrete logarithm-based schemes
  • elliptic curve cryptography
  • basic notions from lattice-based cryptography

Keywords

public key cryptography, key exchange, digital signatures, zero knowledge proofs, RSA, ElGamal, integer factorization, index calculus, elliptic curve cryptography

Teaching methods

lectures, homework exercises, additional references 

Assessment methods

Homework assignments: Weekly problem sets focusing on number-theoretic and complexity-theoretic aspects. These will be complemented by programming exercises in SAGE which is a Python-based computer algebra system. No prior experience with SAGE or Python is required. A subset of the homework will be handed in and graded, counting for 30% of the final grade.   

One mid-term exam (20% of the final grade) and one final exam (50% of the final grade). Both exams will test theoretical understanding as well as understanding of the algorithms and protocols. The exams will include no SAGE programming exercises. If needed, algorithms could be presented with pseudo-code.  The midterm will take place on April 7, 2020 during the exercise session.