The Simple Math Behind Public Key Cryptography

The original version of this story appeared in Quanta Magazine.

For thousands of years, if you wanted to send a secret message, there was basically one way to do it. You’d scramble the message using a special rule, known only to you and your intended audience. This rule acted like the key to a lock. If you had the key, you could unscramble the message; otherwise, you’d need to pick the lock. Some locks are so effective they can never be picked, even with infinite time and resources. But even those schemes suffer from the same Achilles’ heel that plagues all such encryption systems: How do you get that key into the right hands while keeping it out of the wrong ones?

The counterintuitive solution, known as public key cryptography, relies not on keeping a key secret but rather on making it widely available. The trick is to also use a second key that you never share with anyone, even the person you’re communicating with. It’s only by using this combination of two keys—one public, one private—that someone can both scramble and unscramble a message.

To understand how this works, it’s easier to think of the “keys” not as objects that fit into a lock, but as two complementary ingredients in an invisible ink. The first ingredient makes messages disappear, and the second makes them reappear. If a spy named Boris wants to send his counterpart Natasha a secret message, he writes a message and then uses the first ingredient to render it invisible on the page. (This is easy for him to do: Natasha has published an easy and well-known formula for disappearing ink.) When Natasha receives the paper in the mail, she applies the second ingredient that makes Boris’ message reappear.

In this scheme, anyone can make messages invisible, but only Natasha can make them visible again. And because she never shares the formula for the second ingredient with anyone—not even Boris—she can be sure the message hasn’t been deciphered along the way. When Boris wants to receive secret messages, he simply adopts the same procedure: He publishes an easy recipe for making messages disappear (that Natasha or anyone else can use), while keeping another one just for himself that makes them reappear.

In public key cryptography, the “public” and “private” keys work just like the first and second ingredients in this special invisible ink: One encrypts messages, the other decrypts them. But instead of using chemicals, public key cryptography uses mathematical puzzles called trapdoor functions. These functions are easy to compute in one direction and extremely difficult to reverse. But they also contain “trapdoors,” pieces of information that, if known, make the functions trivially easy to compute in both directions.

One common trapdoor function involves multiplying two large prime numbers, an easy operation to perform. But reversing it—that is, starting with the product and finding each prime factor—is computationally impractical. To make a public key, start with two large prime numbers. These are your trapdoors. Multiply the two numbers together, then perform some additional mathematical operations. This public key can now encrypt messages. To decrypt them, you’ll need the corresponding private key, which contains the prime factors—the necessary trapdoors. With those numbers, it’s easy to decrypt the message. Keep those two prime factors secret, and the message will stay secret.

Source link

Latest

The US Has Bird Flu Vaccines. Here’s Why You Can’t Get One

As avian influenza rages through birds and dairy cattle...

Netflix hikes prices as its lead widens over other streaming services – The Washington Post

Netflix hikes prices as its lead widens over other...

Classic (if not a little sweeter) Cinnamon Raisin Swirl Bread

To Make the Dough:In a small bowl, combine yeast...

Tim McGraw’s Field of Dreams Concert: How to Get Tickets

Country star Tim McGraw is gearing up to perform...

Newsletter

spot_img

Don't miss

The US Has Bird Flu Vaccines. Here’s Why You Can’t Get One

As avian influenza rages through birds and dairy cattle...

Netflix hikes prices as its lead widens over other streaming services – The Washington Post

Netflix hikes prices as its lead widens over other...

Classic (if not a little sweeter) Cinnamon Raisin Swirl Bread

To Make the Dough:In a small bowl, combine yeast...

Tim McGraw’s Field of Dreams Concert: How to Get Tickets

Country star Tim McGraw is gearing up to perform...
spot_imgspot_img

The US Has Bird Flu Vaccines. Here’s Why You Can’t Get One

As avian influenza rages through birds and dairy cattle across the United States, Georgia has become the latest state to detect the virus in...

Netflix hikes prices as its lead widens over other streaming services – The Washington Post

Netflix hikes prices as its lead widens over other streaming services  The Washington PostNetflix stock soars—Is ad revenue the key to future growth?  FortuneNetflix is raising...

Classic (if not a little sweeter) Cinnamon Raisin Swirl Bread

To Make the Dough:In a small bowl, combine yeast and a few tablespoons of lukewarm water to activate the yeast. The yeast will bubble...