Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
427649 Information Processing Letters 2010 5 Pages PDF
Abstract

The Advanced Encryption Standard (AES) is the most widely deployed block cipher. It follows the modern iterated block cipher approach, iterating a simple round function multiple times. The last round of AES slightly differs from the others, as a linear mixing operation (called MixColumns) is omitted from it.Following a statement of the designers, it is widely believed that the omission of the last round MixColumns has no security implications. As a result, the majority of attacks on reduced-round variants of AES assume that the last round of the reduced-round version is free of the MixColumns operation.In this letter we challenge this belief, showing evidence that the omission of MixColumns affects the security of (reduced-round) AES. First, we consider a simple example of 1-round AES, where we show that the omission reduces the time complexity of an attack with a single known plaintext from 248 to 216. Then, we examine several previously known attacks on 7-round AES-192 and show that the omission reduces their time complexities by a factor of 216.

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