In
cryptography
Cryptography, or cryptology (from "hidden, secret"; and ''graphein'', "to write", or ''-logy, -logia'', "study", respectively), is the practice and study of techniques for secure communication in the presence of Adversary (cryptography), ...
, a secure channel is a means of
data transmission
Data communication, including data transmission and data reception, is the transfer of data, signal transmission, transmitted and received over a Point-to-point (telecommunications), point-to-point or point-to-multipoint communication chann ...
that is resistant to overhearing and tampering. A confidential channel is a means of data transmission that is resistant to overhearing, or eavesdropping (e.g., reading the content), but not necessarily resistant to tampering (i.e., manipulating the content). An authentic channel is a means of data transmission that is resistant to tampering but not necessarily resistant to overhearing.
In contrast to a secure channel, an insecure channel is
unencrypted and may be subject to
eavesdropping
Eavesdropping is the act of secretly or stealthily listening to the private conversation or communications of others without their consent in order to gather information.
Etymology
The verb ''eavesdrop'' is a back-formation from the noun ''eave ...
and tampering.
Secure communications are possible over an insecure channel if the content to be communicated is encrypted prior to transmission.
Secure channels in the real world
There are no perfectly secure channels in the real world. There are, at best, only ways to make
insecure channels (e.g., couriers,
homing pigeons,
diplomatic bags, etc.) less insecure:
padlock
Padlocks are portable Lock (security device), locks with a shackle that may be passed through an opening (such as a chain, chain link, or hasp staple) to prevent wikt:use, use, theft, vandalism or harm.
Naming and etymology
The term '':wikt: ...
s (between courier wrists and a briefcase),
loyalty tests, security investigations, and guns for courier personnel,
diplomatic immunity
Diplomatic immunity is a principle of international law by which certain foreign government officials are recognized as having legal immunity from the jurisdiction of another country. for diplomatic bags, and so forth.
In 1976, two researchers proposed a key exchange technique (now named after them)—
Diffie–Hellman key exchange (D-H). This protocol allows two parties to generate a
key only known to them, under the assumption that a certain mathematical problem (e.g., the
Diffie–Hellman problem in their proposal) is computationally infeasible (i.e., very very hard) to solve, and that the two parties have access to an authentic channel. In short, that an eavesdropper—conventionally termed 'Eve', who can listen to all messages exchanged by the two parties, but who can not modify the messages—will not learn the exchanged key. Such a key exchange was impossible with any previously known cryptographic schemes based on
symmetric ciphers, because with these schemes it is necessary that the two parties exchange a secret key at some prior time, hence they require a confidential channel at that time which is just what we are attempting to build.
Most cryptographic techniques are trivially breakable if keys are not exchanged securely or, if they actually were so exchanged, if those keys become known in some other way— burglary or extortion, for instance. An actually secure channel will not be required if an insecure channel can be used to securely exchange keys, and if burglary, bribery, or threat aren't used. The eternal problem has been and of course remains—even with modern key exchange protocols—how to know when an insecure channel worked securely (or alternatively, and perhaps more importantly, when it did not), and whether anyone has actually been bribed or threatened or simply lost a notebook (or a notebook computer) with key information in it. These are hard problems in the real world and no solutions are known—only expedients,
jury rigs, and
workarounds.
Future possibilities
Researchers have proposed and demonstrated
quantum cryptography in order to create a secure channel.
It is not clear whether the special conditions under which it can be made to work are practical in the real world of noise, dirt, and imperfection in which most everything is required to function. Thus far, actual implementation of the technique is exquisitely finicky and expensive, limiting it to very special purpose applications. It may also be vulnerable to attacks specific to particular implementations and imperfections in the optical components of which the quantum cryptographic equipment is built. While implementations of classical cryptographic algorithms have received worldwide scrutiny over the years, only a limited amount of public research has been done to assess security of the present-day implementations of quantum cryptosystems, mostly because they are not in widespread use as of 2014.
Modeling a secure channel
Security definitions for a secure channel try to model its properties independently from its concrete instantiation. A good understanding of these properties is needed before designing a secure channel, and before being able to assess its appropriateness of employment in a cryptographic protocol. This is a topic of
provable security. A definition of a secure channel that remains secure, even when used in arbitrary cryptographic protocols is an important building block for
universally composable cryptography.
A universally composable authenticated channel can be built using
digital signatures and a
public key infrastructure
A public key infrastructure (PKI) is a set of roles, policies, hardware, software and procedures needed to create, manage, distribute, use, store and revoke digital certificates and manage public-key encryption.
The purpose of a PKI is to fac ...
.
Universally composable confidential channels are known to exist under
computational hardness assumptions based on
hybrid encryption and a
public key infrastructure
A public key infrastructure (PKI) is a set of roles, policies, hardware, software and procedures needed to create, manage, distribute, use, store and revoke digital certificates and manage public-key encryption.
The purpose of a PKI is to fac ...
.
[Waka Nagao, Yoshifumi Manabe, Tatsuaki Okamoto: A Universally Composable Secure Channel Based on the KEM-DEM Framework. TCC 2005: 426-444]
See also
*
Cryptochannel
*
Hybrid encryption
*
Secure communication
References
{{DEFAULTSORT:Secure Channel
Secure communication
Cryptography