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  3. Let's Encrypt is announcing that they'll support Merkle Tree Certificates:

Let's Encrypt is announcing that they'll support Merkle Tree Certificates:

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  • neverpanic@chaos.socialN This user is from outside of this forum
    neverpanic@chaos.socialN This user is from outside of this forum
    neverpanic@chaos.social
    wrote last edited by
    #1

    Let's Encrypt is announcing that they'll support Merkle Tree Certificates:

    Link Preview Image
    A Post-Quantum Future for Let's Encrypt

    Let’s Encrypt is committed to a post-quantum-safe Web PKI. The path we’re planning to take is Merkle Tree Certificates (“MTCs”), a new approach that adds post-quantum authentication to the web without sacrificing the speed and reliability that have made TLS universal. This post is about these plans and why we believe MTCs are worth pursuing as a key to a post-quantum future. An increasingly urgent problem For much of the last several years, the conversation about post-quantum cryptography has been a conversation about encryption. The reasoning was straightforward: an attacker who records encrypted traffic today might be able to decrypt it years from now once quantum computers can break the underlying math. Authentication, the part of TLS that indicates a server is who it says it is, has been a less urgent problem. A quantum computer needs to forge a signature in real time, not retroactively, so threats to authentication hinge on the existence of a cryptographically relevant quantum computer (CRQC).

    favicon

    (letsencrypt.org)

    #TLS #PostQuantumCryptography #PQC

    13reak@infosec.exchange1 1 Reply Last reply
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    • neverpanic@chaos.socialN neverpanic@chaos.social

      Let's Encrypt is announcing that they'll support Merkle Tree Certificates:

      Link Preview Image
      A Post-Quantum Future for Let's Encrypt

      Let’s Encrypt is committed to a post-quantum-safe Web PKI. The path we’re planning to take is Merkle Tree Certificates (“MTCs”), a new approach that adds post-quantum authentication to the web without sacrificing the speed and reliability that have made TLS universal. This post is about these plans and why we believe MTCs are worth pursuing as a key to a post-quantum future. An increasingly urgent problem For much of the last several years, the conversation about post-quantum cryptography has been a conversation about encryption. The reasoning was straightforward: an attacker who records encrypted traffic today might be able to decrypt it years from now once quantum computers can break the underlying math. Authentication, the part of TLS that indicates a server is who it says it is, has been a less urgent problem. A quantum computer needs to forge a signature in real time, not retroactively, so threats to authentication hinge on the existence of a cryptographically relevant quantum computer (CRQC).

      favicon

      (letsencrypt.org)

      #TLS #PostQuantumCryptography #PQC

      13reak@infosec.exchange1 This user is from outside of this forum
      13reak@infosec.exchange1 This user is from outside of this forum
      13reak@infosec.exchange
      wrote last edited by
      #2

      @neverpanic

      Nice, we implemented that at the uni 10 years ago. Cool to see that the industry is catching up.

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