
Enrico Zimuel
Bio [2006]
Enrico Zimuel is a research programmer at the Informatics Institute of
the University of
Amsterdam (the Netherlands). He received his laurea degree cum
laude in computer science and economics from the G. d'Annunzio University of
Chieti-Pescara (Italy).
He worked as an IT consultant for more than 10 years, with many
Italian companies in the sectors of IT security and software development.
In 1999 he coauthored a book about cryptography named Secrets,
Spies and Codes Number (Apogeo, Italy). Moreover, he published
articles on cryptography, computer security, and query processing for XML.
Now he collaborates with the Science Department of the
G. d'Annunzio University of Chieti-Pescara. His (other) personal
interests include traveling, electronic music, computer art, poetry,
cinema, free climbing, kickboxing, swimming, mountain biking,
etc.
Project Title
A New Cryptographic Hash Function Based on the Cellular Automaton Rule 30
Project
The aim of my project is to use the cellular automaton rule 30 to
create a secure cryptographic hash function. A hash function H
is a transformation that takes a variable-size input m and
returns a fixed-size string, which is called the hash value h
(that is, h = H(m)). Hash functions with just
this property have a variety of general computational uses, but when
employed in cryptography the hash functions are usually chosen to have
some additional properties.
The basic requirements for a cryptographic hash function are:
- The input can be of any length
- The output has a fixed length
- H(x) is relatively easy to compute for any given x
- H(x) is one-way
- H(x) is collision-free
A hash function H is said to be one-way if it is hard to
invert, where "hard to invert" means that given a hash value h,
it is computationally infeasible to find some input x such
that H(x) = h.
If, given a message x, it is computationally infeasible to find
a message y not equal to x such that H(x) =
H(y), then H is said to be a weakly collision-free
hash function.
A strongly collision-free hash function H is one for
which it is computationally infeasible to find any two
messages x and y such that H(x)
= H(y).
I'll use the Avalanche Test and the Collision Test to prove the
security of the hash function. Moreover, I'll investigate the global
and local reversibility of the cellular automaton rule 30.
Favorite Four-Color, Radius-1/2 Rule
Rule chosen: 2536347893
Note: This number is prime. 2536347893==Prime[123123123]
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