▲ | DoctorOetker 10 days ago | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
The question is not if the described behavior is happening, but how credible their claims of cryptographic security are for the cryptographic primitives we depend on en masse. Apart from unconditional security protocols, the safety of the cryptographic primitives is never proven, but insinuated by the lack of a public disproof. How can consensus agreement be satisfied with the situation that 1) FLT may have been proven by Wiles 2) But has not been formally verified yet 3) We assume Fermat could not have found a proof, which insinuates that 4) a succinct proof is assumed to be impossible unless 5) we collectively underestimate Fermat / the power of individual human brains / sheer dedication 6) while pretending there is little to no connection between FLT and public key encryption schemes. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
▲ | Tainnor 10 days ago | parent [-] | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
I have no idea how these things are related. In any case, to my knowledge, no cipher has ever unconditionally been proven secure except the one time pad. We just have a bunch of conditional security proof that are correct if the underlying assumptions (e.g. factoring primes is hard) are correct. Critically, I think all (?) such proofs only work if P != NP, which still remains unproven. > 1) FLT may have been proven by Wiles The "may" is misplaced here. Wiles's proof has been extensively reviewed, just because it hasn't been formalised doesn't mean it's wrong. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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