MAGENTA
In cryptography, MAGENTA is a symmetric key block cipher developed by Michael Jacobson Jr. and Klaus Huber for Deutsche Telekom. The name MAGENTA is an acronym for Multifunctional Algorithm for General-purpose Encryption and Network Telecommunication Applications. (The color magenta is also part of the corporate identity of Deutsche Telekom.) The cipher was submitted to the Advanced Encryption Standard process, but did not advance beyond the first round; cryptographic weaknesses were discovered and it was found to be one of the slower ciphers submitted.[1]
General | |
---|---|
Designers | Michael Jacobson Jr., Klaus Huber |
First published | 1998 |
Cipher detail | |
Key sizes | 128, 192 or 256 bits |
Block sizes | 128 bits |
Structure | Feistel network |
Rounds | 6 or 8 |
MAGENTA has a block size of 128 bits and key sizes of 128, 192 and 256 bits. It is a Feistel cipher with six or eight rounds.
After the presentation of the cipher at the first AES conference, several cryptographers immediately found vulnerabilities.[2] These were written up and presented at the second AES conference (Biham et al., 1999).
References
- "Index of /CryptoToolkit/aes/round1/testvals/". NIST. Archived from the original on 2007-05-17.
- Dianelos Georgoudis (1998-08-21). "Live from the First AES Conference". Newsgroup: sci.crypt. Usenet: [email protected]. Retrieved 2016-11-30.
- Eli Biham; Alex Biryukov; Niels Ferguson; Lars Knudsen; Bruce Schneier; Adi Shamir (April 1999). Cryptanalysis of Magenta (PDF). Second AES candidate conference (published 1998-08-20).