kyber | falcon | |
---|---|---|
6 | 1 | |
689 | 20 | |
2.2% | - | |
5.1 | 1.6 | |
4 months ago | 11 months ago | |
C | C | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | - |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
kyber
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Quantum Computers Break Encryption in China But Far From Cracking Bitcoin
I wouldn’t even be worried about the banks, any mode of encryption used for data would be at stake, but there’s already some algos that are quantum secure made by Crystal Kyber. Here’s their git repo: https://github.com/pq-crystals/kyber.git
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NSA, NIST, and post-quantum cryptography
So, question then, isn't one of the differences between this time's selection, compared to previous selections, that some of the algorithms are open source with their code available.
For example, Kyber, one of the finalists, is here: https://github.com/pq-crystals/kyber
And where it's not open source, I believe in the first round submissions, everyone included reference implementations.
Does the code being available make it easy to verify whether there are some shady/shenanigans going on, even without NIST's cooperation?
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NIST Announces First Four Quantum-Resistant Cryptographic Algorithms
The C reference code is available: https://github.com/pq-crystals/kyber
- NIST announces PQC-algoritms to be standardized
- Kyber key encapsulation mechanism (Post Quantum Cryptography Standardization)
falcon
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NIST announces PQC-algoritms to be standardized
Well good thing that some of the cryptographers that created Falcon [0][1] for post-quantum cryptography for digital signatures use cases is considered to be 'standardised' as such.
Looks like Algorand is one of the more serious projects out there with top cryptographers as evidenced by both Algorand and Falcon.
[0] https://falcon-sign.info
[1] https://github.com/algorand/falcon
What are some alternatives?
minisign - A dead simple tool to sign files and verify digital signatures.
falcon.py - A python implementation of the signature scheme Falcon
openssl - Fork of OpenSSL 1.1.1 that includes prototype quantum-resistant algorithms and ciphersuites based on liboqs [OQS-OpenSSL 1.1.1 is NO LONGER SUPPORTED, please switch to OQS-Provider for OpenSSL 3]
kyber-k2so - Go implementation of the Kyber (version 3) post-quantum IND-CCA2 KEM.
mbedTLS - An open source, portable, easy to use, readable and flexible TLS library, and reference implementation of the PSA Cryptography API. Releases are on a varying cadence, typically around 3 - 6 months between releases.
CIRCL - CIRCL: Cloudflare Interoperable Reusable Cryptographic Library
Selenite - An Experimental Rust Crate for Post-Quantum Code-Signing Certificates.
pqc.js - JS bindings and playground of post-quantum asymmetric ciphers
libsodium - A modern, portable, easy to use crypto library.
pqcrypto.js
s2n - An implementation of the TLS/SSL protocols