Published: May 1, 1988
Citation: Proceedings of the IEEE vol. 76, no. 5, (May 1988) pp. 550-559
Author(s)
Miles Smid (NIST), Dennis Branstad (NIST)
The authors examine the past and future of the Data Encryption Standard (DES), which is the first, and to the present date, only, publicly available cryptographic algorithm that has been endorsed by the US government of the standard during the early 1970s, the controversy regarding the proposed standard during the mid-1970s, the growing acceptance and use of the standard in the 1980s, and some recent developments that could affect its future.
The authors examine the past and future of the Data Encryption Standard (DES), which is the first, and to the present date, only, publicly available cryptographic algorithm that has been endorsed by the US government of the standard during the early 1970s, the controversy regarding the proposed...
See full abstract
The authors examine the past and future of the Data Encryption Standard (DES), which is the first, and to the present date, only, publicly available cryptographic algorithm that has been endorsed by the US government of the standard during the early 1970s, the controversy regarding the proposed standard during the mid-1970s, the growing acceptance and use of the standard in the 1980s, and some recent developments that could affect its future.
Hide full abstract
Keywords
cryptographic algorithm; Data Encryption Standard (DES); encryption
Control Families
None selected