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AES (Rijndael)×Criptografia de corbes el·líptiques×Criptosistema RSA×
CampCriptografiaCriptografiaCriptografia
FamíliaMachine learningMachine learningMachine learning
Any d'origen200119851978
Autor originalJoan DaemenNeal KoblitzRonald Rivest
Tipussymmetric encryption algorithmasymmetric encryption and key agreementasymmetric encryption algorithm
Font seminalDaemen, J., & Rijmen, V. (2002). The Design of Rijndael: AES - The Advanced Encryption Standard. Springer-Verlag. ISBN: 978-3540425809Miller, V. S. (1985). Use of Elliptic Curves in Cryptography. In Proceedings of the Advances in Cryptology - CRYPTO 1985, LNCS 218, pp. 417-426. DOI ↗Rivest, R. L., Shamir, A., & Adleman, L. (1978). A method for obtaining digital signatures and public-key cryptosystems. Communications of the ACM, 21(2), 120-126. DOI ↗
ÀliesRijndael, AES encryption, FIPS 197ECC, elliptic curve cryptosystemRSA encryption, RSA public-key cryptography
Relacionats434
ResumThe Advanced Encryption Standard (AES), also known as Rijndael, is a symmetric block cipher adopted as the official encryption standard by the U.S. government in 2001. It processes data in 128-bit blocks using 128, 192, or 256-bit keys and performs multiple rounds of substitution, permutation, and mixing operations. AES is the most widely used symmetric encryption algorithm today, securing everything from government communications to everyday internet traffic.Elliptic Curve Cryptography (ECC) is a public-key cryptosystem based on the algebraic structure of elliptic curves over finite fields. Proposed independently by Neal Koblitz and Victor Miller in 1985, ECC offers equivalent security to RSA with much smaller key sizes. Modern cryptography increasingly favors ECC for its efficiency: a 256-bit ECC key provides security comparable to a 2048-bit RSA key, making it ideal for constrained environments and high-performance systems.RSA is a foundational public-key cryptosystem developed by Rivest, Shamir, and Adleman in 1978. It enables secure encryption and digital signatures by using a pair of mathematically linked keys: a public key for encryption and a private key for decryption. RSA's security relies on the computational difficulty of factoring large composite numbers into their prime factors.
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ScholarGateCompara mètodes: AES (Rijndael) · Elliptic Curve Cryptography · RSA Cryptosystem. Recuperat el 2026-06-18 de https://scholargate.app/ca/compare