Boolean Functions for Cryptography and Error-Correcting Codes
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Abstract
A fundamental objective of cryptography is to enable two persons to communicate over an insecure channel (a public channel such as the internet) in such a way that any other person is unable to recover their message (called the plaintext) from what is sent in its place over the channel (the ciphertext). The transformation of the plaintext into the ciphertext is called encryption, or enciphering. Encryption-decryption is the most ancient cryptographic activity (ciphers already existed four centuries b.c.), but its nature has deeply changed with the invention of computers, because the cryptanalysis (the activity of the third person, the eavesdropper, who aims at recovering the message) can use their power.
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1Topics & keywords
Topics
Keywords
- Ciphertext
- Plaintext
- Cryptanalysis
- Cryptography
- Computer science
- Encryption
- Theoretical computer science
- Computer security
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