CryptoDB
Karthik Bhargavan
Publications
Year
Venue
Title
2021
RWC
SoK: Computer-Aided Cryptography
Abstract
Computer-aided cryptography is an active area of research that develops and
applies formal, machine-checkable approaches to the design, analysis, and
implementation of cryptography. We present a cross-cutting systematization of
the computer-aided cryptography literature, focusing on three main areas:
(i) design-level security (both symbolic security and computational
security), (ii) functional correctness and efficiency, and (iii)
implementation-level security (with a focus on digital side-channel
resistance). In each area, we first clarify the role of computer-aided
cryptography---how it can help and what the caveats are---in addressing
current challenges. We next present a taxonomy of state-of-the-art tools,
comparing their accuracy, scope, trustworthiness, and usability. Then, we
highlight their main achievements, trade-offs, and research challenges. After
covering the three main areas, we present two case studies. First, we study
efforts in combining tools focused on different areas to consolidate the
guarantees they can provide. Second, we distill the lessons learned from the
computer-aided cryptography community's involvement in the TLS 1.3
standardization effort. Finally, we conclude with recommendations to paper
authors, tool developers, and standardization bodies moving forward.
Coauthors
- Manuel Barbosa (1)
- Gilles Barthe (1)
- Karthik Bhargavan (1)
- Bruno Blanchet (1)
- Cas Cremers (1)
- Kevin Liao (1)
- Bryan Parno (1)