Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
427566 Information Processing Letters 2013 7 Pages PDF
Abstract

In this paper we discuss the problem of generically finding near-collisions for cryptographic hash functions in a memoryless way. A common approach is to truncate several output bits of the hash function and to look for collisions of this modified function. In two recent papers, an enhancement to this approach was introduced which is based on classical cycle-finding techniques and covering codes. This paper investigates two aspects of the problem of memoryless near-collisions. Firstly, we give a full treatment of the trade-off between the number of truncated bits and the success-probability of the truncation based approach. Secondly, we demonstrate the limits of cycle-finding methods for finding near-collisions by showing that, opposed to the collision case, a memoryless variant cannot match the query-complexity of the “memory-full” birthday-like near-collision finding method.

► We study memoryless near-collisions of hash functions via cycle-finding. ► We give a full treatise of a probabilistic truncation-based method. ► We discuss limitations of the cycle-finding approach.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Computer Science Computational Theory and Mathematics
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