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Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF)                         A. JivsovRequest for Comments: 6637                          Symantec CorporationCategory: Standards Track                                      June 2012ISSN: 2070-1721Elliptic Curve Cryptography (ECC) in OpenPGPAbstract   This document defines an Elliptic Curve Cryptography extension to the   OpenPGP public key format and specifies three Elliptic Curves that   enjoy broad support by other standards, including standards published   by the US National Institute of Standards and Technology.  The   document specifies the conventions for interoperability between   compliant OpenPGP implementations that make use of this extension and   these Elliptic Curves.Status of This Memo   This is an Internet Standards Track document.   This document is a product of the Internet Engineering Task Force   (IETF).  It represents the consensus of the IETF community.  It has   received public review and has been approved for publication by the   Internet Engineering Steering Group (IESG).  Further information on   Internet Standards is available inSection 2 of RFC 5741.   Information about the current status of this document, any errata,   and how to provide feedback on it may be obtained athttp://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6637.Copyright Notice   Copyright (c) 2012 IETF Trust and the persons identified as the   document authors.  All rights reserved.   This document is subject toBCP 78 and the IETF Trust's Legal   Provisions Relating to IETF Documents   (http://trustee.ietf.org/license-info) in effect on the date of   publication of this document.  Please review these documents   carefully, as they describe your rights and restrictions with respect   to this document.  Code Components extracted from this document must   include Simplified BSD License text as described in Section 4.e of   the Trust Legal Provisions and are provided without warranty as   described in the Simplified BSD License.Jivsov                       Standards Track                    [Page 1]

RFC 6637                     ECC in OpenPGP                    June 2012Table of Contents1. Introduction ....................................................32. Conventions used in This Document ...............................33. Elliptic Curve Cryptography .....................................34. Supported ECC Curves ............................................35. Supported Public Key Algorithms .................................46. Conversion Primitives ...........................................47. Key Derivation Function .........................................58. EC DH Algorithm (ECDH) ..........................................59. Encoding of Public and Private Keys .............................810. Message Encoding with Public Keys ..............................911. ECC Curve OID .................................................1012. Compatibility Profiles ........................................1012.1. OpenPGP ECC Profile ......................................1012.2. Suite-B Profile ..........................................1112.2.1. Security Strength at 192 Bits .....................1112.2.2. Security Strength at 128 Bits .....................1113. Security Considerations .......................................1214. IANA Considerations ...........................................1415. References ....................................................1415.1. Normative References .....................................1415.2. Informative References ...................................1516. Contributors ..................................................1517. Acknowledgment ................................................15Jivsov                       Standards Track                    [Page 2]

RFC 6637                     ECC in OpenPGP                    June 20121.  Introduction   The OpenPGP protocol [RFC4880] supports RSA and DSA (Digital   Signature Algorithm) public key formats.  This document defines the   extension to incorporate support for public keys that are based on   Elliptic Curve Cryptography (ECC).2.  Conventions Used in This Document   The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT",   "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this   document are to be interpreted as described in [RFC2119].  Any   implementation that adheres to the format and methods specified in   this document is called a compliant application.  Compliant   applications are a subset of the broader set of OpenPGP applications   described in [RFC4880].  Any [RFC2119] keyword within this document   applies to compliant applications only.3.  Elliptic Curve Cryptography   This document establishes the minimum set of Elliptic Curve   Cryptography (ECC) public key parameters and cryptographic methods   that will likely satisfy the widest range of platforms and   applications and facilitate interoperability.  It adds a more   efficient method for applications to balance the overall level of   security with any AES algorithm specified in [RFC4880] than by simply   increasing the size of RSA keys.  This document defines a path to   expand ECC support in the future.   The National Security Agency (NSA) of the United States specifies ECC   for use in its [SuiteB] set of algorithms.  This document includes   algorithms required by Suite B that are not present in [RFC4880].   [KOBLITZ] provides a thorough introduction to ECC.4.  Supported ECC Curves   This document references three named prime field curves, defined in   [FIPS-186-3] as "Curve P-256", "Curve P-384", and "Curve P-521".   The named curves are referenced as a sequence of bytes in this   document, called throughout, curve OID.Section 11 describes in   detail how this sequence of bytes is formed.Jivsov                       Standards Track                    [Page 3]

RFC 6637                     ECC in OpenPGP                    June 20125.  Supported Public Key Algorithms   The supported public key algorithms are the Elliptic Curve Digital   Signature Algorithm (ECDSA) [FIPS-186-3] and the Elliptic Curve   Diffie-Hellman (ECDH).  A compatible specification of ECDSA is given   in [RFC6090] as "KT-I Signatures" and in [SEC1]; ECDH is defined inSection 8 of this document.   The following public key algorithm IDs are added to expandSection9.1 of [RFC4880], "Public-Key Algorithms":          ID        Description of Algorithm          --        --------------------------          18        ECDH public key algorithm          19        ECDSA public key algorithm   Compliant applications MUST support ECDSA and ECDH.6.  Conversion Primitives   This document only defines the uncompressed point format.  The point   is encoded in the Multiprecision Integer (MPI) format [RFC4880].  The   content of the MPI is the following:      B = 04 || x || y   where x and y are coordinates of the point P = (x, y), each encoded   in the big-endian format and zero-padded to the adjusted underlying   field size.  The adjusted underlying field size is the underlying   field size that is rounded up to the nearest 8-bit boundary.   Therefore, the exact size of the MPI payload is 515 bits for "Curve   P-256", 771 for "Curve P-384", and 1059 for "Curve P-521".   Even though the zero point, also called the point at infinity, may   occur as a result of arithmetic operations on points of an elliptic   curve, it SHALL NOT appear in data structures defined in this   document.   This encoding is compatible with the definition given in [SEC1].   If other conversion methods are defined in the future, a compliant   application MUST NOT use a new format when in doubt that any   recipient can support it.  Consider, for example, that while both the   public key and the per-recipient ECDH data structure, respectively   defined in Sections9 and10, contain an encoded point field, the   format changes to the field inSection 10 only affect a given   recipient of a given message.Jivsov                       Standards Track                    [Page 4]

RFC 6637                     ECC in OpenPGP                    June 20127.  Key Derivation Function   A key derivation function (KDF) is necessary to implement the EC   encryption.  The Concatenation Key Derivation Function (Approved   Alternative 1) [NIST-SP800-56A] with the KDF hash function that is   SHA2-256 [FIPS-180-3] or stronger is REQUIRED.  SeeSection 12 for   the details regarding the choice of the hash function.   For convenience, the synopsis of the encoding method is given below   with significant simplifications attributable to the restricted   choice of hash functions in this document.  However, [NIST-SP800-56A]   is the normative source of the definition.          //   Implements KDF( X, oBits, Param );          //   Input: point X = (x,y)          //   oBits - the desired size of output          //   hBits - the size of output of hash function Hash          //   Param - octets representing the parameters          //   Assumes that oBits <= hBits         // Convert the point X to the octet string, seesection 6:         //   ZB' = 04 || x || y         // and extract the x portion from ZB'         ZB = x;         MB = Hash ( 00 || 00 || 00 || 01 || ZB || Param );         return oBits leftmost bits of MB.   Note that ZB in the KDF description above is the compact   representation of X, defined inSection 4.2 of [RFC6090].8.  EC DH Algorithm (ECDH)   The method is a combination of an ECC Diffie-Hellman method to   establish a shared secret, a key derivation method to process the   shared secret into a derived key, and a key wrapping method that uses   the derived key to protect a session key used to encrypt a message.   The One-Pass Diffie-Hellman method C(1, 1, ECC CDH) [NIST-SP800-56A]   MUST be implemented with the following restrictions: the ECC CDH   primitive employed by this method is modified to always assume the   cofactor as 1, the KDF specified inSection 7 is used, and the KDF   parameters specified below are used.Jivsov                       Standards Track                    [Page 5]

RFC 6637                     ECC in OpenPGP                    June 2012   The KDF parameters are encoded as a concatenation of the following 5   variable-length and fixed-length fields, compatible with the   definition of the OtherInfo bitstring [NIST-SP800-56A]:   o  a variable-length field containing a curve OID, formatted as      follows:         -  a one-octet size of the following field         - the octets representing a curve OID, defined inSection 11   o  a one-octet public key algorithm ID defined inSection 5   o  a variable-length field containing KDF parameters, identical to      the corresponding field in the ECDH public key, formatted as      follows:         -  a one-octet size of the following fields; values 0 and 0xff            are reserved for future extensions         -  a one-octet value 01, reserved for future extensions         -  a one-octet hash function ID used with the KDF         -  a one-octet algorithm ID for the symmetric algorithm used to            wrap the symmetric key for message encryption; seeSection 8            for details   o  20 octets representing the UTF-8 encoding of the string      "Anonymous Sender    ", which is the octet sequence      41 6E 6F 6E 79 6D 6F 75 73 20 53 65 6E 64 65 72 20 20 20 20   o  20 octets representing a recipient encryption subkey or a master      key fingerprint, identifying the key material that is needed for      the decryption   The size of the KDF parameters sequence, defined above, is either 54   or 51 for the three curves defined in this document.   The key wrapping method is described in [RFC3394].  KDF produces a   symmetric key that is used as a key-encryption key (KEK) as specified   in [RFC3394].  Refer toSection 13 for the details regarding the   choice of the KEK algorithm, which SHOULD be one of three AES   algorithms.  Key wrapping and unwrapping is performed with the   default initial value of [RFC3394].Jivsov                       Standards Track                    [Page 6]

RFC 6637                     ECC in OpenPGP                    June 2012   The input to the key wrapping method is the value "m" derived from   the session key, as described inSection 5.1 of [RFC4880], "Public-   Key Encrypted Session Key Packets (Tag 1)", except that the PKCS #1.5   (Public-Key Cryptography Standards version 1.5) padding step is   omitted.  The result is padded using the method described in [PKCS5]   to the 8-byte granularity.  For example, the following AES-256   session key, in which 32 octets are denoted from k0 to k31, is   composed to form the following 40 octet sequence:09 k0 k1 ... k31 c0 c1 05 05 05 05 05   The octets c0 and c1 above denote the checksum.  This encoding allows   the sender to obfuscate the size of the symmetric encryption key used   to encrypt the data.  For example, assuming that an AES algorithm is   used for the session key, the sender MAY use 21, 13, and 5 bytes of   padding for AES-128, AES-192, and AES-256, respectively, to provide   the same number of octets, 40 total, as an input to the key wrapping   method.   The output of the method consists of two fields.  The first field is   the MPI containing the ephemeral key used to establish the shared   secret.  The second field is composed of the following two fields:   o  a one-octet encoding the size in octets of the result of the key      wrapping method; the value 255 is reserved for future extensions   o  up to 254 octets representing the result of the key wrapping      method, applied to the 8-byte padded session key, as described      above   Note that for session key sizes 128, 192, and 256 bits, the size of   the result of the key wrapping method is, respectively, 32, 40, and   48 octets, unless the size obfuscation is used.   For convenience, the synopsis of the encoding method is given below;   however, this section, [NIST-SP800-56A], and [RFC3394] are the   normative sources of the definition.Jivsov                       Standards Track                    [Page 7]

RFC 6637                     ECC in OpenPGP                    June 2012         Obtain the authenticated recipient public key R         Generate an ephemeral key pair {v, V=vG}         Compute the shared point S = vR;         m = symm_alg_ID || session key || checksum || pkcs5_padding;         curve_OID_len = (byte)len(curve_OID);         Param = curve_OID_len || curve_OID || public_key_alg_ID || 03         || 01 || KDF_hash_ID || KEK_alg_ID for AESKeyWrap || "Anonymous         Sender    " || recipient_fingerprint;         Z_len = the key size for the KEK_alg_ID used with AESKeyWrap         Compute Z = KDF( S, Z_len, Param );         Compute C = AESKeyWrap( Z, m ) as per [RFC3394]         VB = convert point V to the octet string         Output (MPI(VB) || len(C) || C).   The decryption is the inverse of the method given.  Note that the   recipient obtains the shared secret by calculating       S = rV = rvG, where (r,R) is the recipient's key pair.   Consistent withSection 5.13 of [RFC4880], "Sym. Encrypted Integrity   Protected Data Packet (Tag 18)", a Modification Detection Code (MDC)   MUST be used anytime the symmetric key is protected by ECDH.9. Encoding of Public and Private Keys   The following algorithm-specific packets are added toSection 5.5.2   of [RFC4880], "Public-Key Packet Formats", to support ECDH and ECDSA.   This algorithm-specific portion is:   Algorithm-Specific Fields for ECDSA keys:      o  a variable-length field containing a curve OID, formatted         as follows:         -  a one-octet size of the following field; values 0 and            0xFF are reserved for future extensions         -  octets representing a curve OID, defined inSection 11      o  MPI of an EC point representing a public keyJivsov                       Standards Track                    [Page 8]

RFC 6637                     ECC in OpenPGP                    June 2012     Algorithm-Specific Fields for ECDH keys:      o  a variable-length field containing a curve OID, formatted         as follows:         -  a one-octet size of the following field; values 0 and            0xFF are reserved for future extensions         -  the octets representing a curve OID, defined inSection 11         -  MPI of an EC point representing a public key      o  a variable-length field containing KDF parameters,         formatted as follows:         -  a one-octet size of the following fields; values 0 and            0xff are reserved for future extensions         -  a one-octet value 01, reserved for future extensions         -  a one-octet hash function ID used with a KDF         -  a one-octet algorithm ID for the symmetric algorithm            used to wrap the symmetric key used for the message            encryption; seeSection 8 for details   Observe that an ECDH public key is composed of the same sequence of   fields that define an ECDSA key, plus the KDF parameters field.   The following algorithm-specific packets are added toSection 5.5.3.   of [RFC4880], "Secret-Key Packet Formats", to support ECDH and ECDSA.     Algorithm-Specific Fields for ECDH or ECDSA secret keys:      o  an MPI of an integer representing the secret key, which is a         scalar of the public EC point10.  Message Encoding with Public KeysSection 5.2.2 of [RFC4880], "Version 3 Signature Packet Format"   defines signature formats.  No changes in the format are needed for   ECDSA.Section 5.1 of [RFC4880], "Public-Key Encrypted Session Key Packets   (Tag 1)" is extended to support ECDH.  The following two fields are   the result of applying the KDF, as described inSection 8.Jivsov                       Standards Track                    [Page 9]

RFC 6637                     ECC in OpenPGP                    June 2012   Algorithm-Specific Fields for ECDH:      o an MPI of an EC point representing an ephemeral public key      o a one-octet size, followed by a symmetric key encoded using the         method described inSection 811.  ECC Curve OID   The parameter curve OID is an array of octets that define a named   curve.  The table below specifies the exact sequence of bytes for   each named curve referenced in this document:   ASN.1 Object          OID Curve OID bytes in         Curve name in   Identifier            len hexadecimal                [FIPS-186-3]                             representation   1.2.840.10045.3.1.7    8   2A 86 48 CE 3D 03 01 07   NIST curve P-256   1.3.132.0.34           5   2B 81 04 00 22            NIST curve P-384   1.3.132.0.35           5   2B 81 04 00 23            NIST curve P-521   The sequence of octets in the third column is the result of applying   the Distinguished Encoding Rules (DER) to the ASN.1 Object Identifier   with subsequent truncation.  The truncation removes the two fields of   encoded Object Identifier.  The first omitted field is one octet   representing the Object Identifier tag, and the second omitted field   is the length of the Object Identifier body.  For example, the   complete ASN.1 DER encoding for the NIST P-256 curve OID is "06 08 2A   86 48 CE 3D 03 01 07", from which the first entry in the table above   is constructed by omitting the first two octets.  Only the truncated   sequence of octets is the valid representation of a curve OID.12.  Compatibility Profiles12.1.  OpenPGP ECC Profile   A compliant application MUST implement NIST curve P-256, MAY   implement NIST curve P-384, and SHOULD implement NIST curve P-521, as   defined inSection 11.  A compliant application MUST implement   SHA2-256 and SHOULD implement SHA2-384 and SHA2-512.  A compliant   application MUST implement AES-128 and SHOULD implement AES-256.Jivsov                       Standards Track                   [Page 10]

RFC 6637                     ECC in OpenPGP                    June 2012   A compliant application SHOULD followSection 13 regarding the choice   of the following algorithms for each curve:   o  the KDF hash algorithm   o  the KEK algorithm   o  the message digest algorithm and the hash algorithm used in the      key certifications   o  the symmetric algorithm used for message encryption.   It is recommended that the chosen symmetric algorithm for message   encryption be no less secure than the KEK algorithm.12.2.  Suite-B Profile   A subset of algorithms allowed by this document can be used to   achieve [SuiteB] compatibility.  The references to [SuiteB] in this   document are informative.  This document is primarily concerned with   format specification, leaving additional security restrictions   unspecified, such as matching the assigned security level of   information to authorized recipients or interoperability concerns   arising from fewer allowed algorithms in [SuiteB] than allowed by   [RFC4880].12.2.1.  Security Strength at 192 Bits   To achieve the security strength of 192 bits, [SuiteB] requires NIST   curve P-384, AES-256, and SHA2-384.  The symmetric algorithm   restriction means that the algorithm of KEK used for key wrapping inSection 8 and an [RFC4880] session key used for message encryption   must be AES-256.  The hash algorithm restriction means that the hash   algorithms of KDF and the [RFC4880] message digest calculation must   be SHA-384.12.2.2.  Security Strength at 128 Bits   The set of algorithms inSection 12.2.1 is extended to allow NIST   curve P-256, AES-128, and SHA2-256.Jivsov                       Standards Track                   [Page 11]

RFC 6637                     ECC in OpenPGP                    June 201213.  Security Considerations   Refer to [FIPS-186-3], B.4.1, for the method to generate a uniformly   distributed ECC private key.   The curves proposed in this document correspond to the symmetric key   sizes 128 bits, 192 bits, and 256 bits, as described in the table   below.  This allows a compliant application to offer balanced public   key security, which is compatible with the symmetric key strength for   each AES algorithm allowed by [RFC4880].   The following table defines the hash and the symmetric encryption   algorithm that SHOULD be used with a given curve for ECDSA or ECDH.   A stronger hash algorithm or a symmetric key algorithm MAY be used   for a given ECC curve.  However, note that the increase in the   strength of the hash algorithm or the symmetric key algorithm may not   increase the overall security offered by the given ECC key.   Curve name         ECC        RSA         Hash size   Symmetric                      strength   strength,               key size                                 informative   NIST curve P-256   256        3072        256         128   NIST curve P-384   384        7680        384         192   NIST curve P-521   521        15360       512         256   Requirement levels indicated elsewhere in this document lead to the   following combinations of algorithms in the OpenPGP profile: MUST   implement NIST curve P-256 / SHA2-256 / AES-128, SHOULD implement   NIST curve P-521 / SHA2-512 / AES-256, MAY implement NIST curve P-384   / SHA2-384 / AES-256, among other allowed combinations.   Consistent with the table above, the following table defines the KDF   hash algorithm and the AES KEK encryption algorithm that SHOULD be   used with a given curve for ECDH.  A stronger KDF hash algorithm or   AES KEK algorithm MAY be used for a given ECC curve.   Curve name          Recommended KDF      Recommended KEK                       hash algorithm       encryption algorithm   NIST curve P-256    SHA2-256             AES-128   NIST curve P-384    SHA2-384             AES-192   NIST curve P-521    SHA2-512             AES-256Jivsov                       Standards Track                   [Page 12]

RFC 6637                     ECC in OpenPGP                    June 2012   This document explicitly discourages the use of algorithms other than   AES as a KEK algorithm because backward compatibility of the ECDH   format is not a concern.  The KEK algorithm is only used within the   scope of a Public-Key Encrypted Session Key Packet, which represents   an ECDH key recipient of a message.  Compare this with the algorithm   used for the session key of the message, which MAY be different from   a KEK algorithm.   Compliant applications SHOULD implement, advertise through key   preferences, and use in compliance with [RFC4880], the strongest   algorithms specified in this document.   Note that the [RFC4880] symmetric algorithm preference list may make   it impossible to use the balanced strength of symmetric key   algorithms for a corresponding public key.  For example, the presence   of the symmetric key algorithm IDs and their order in the key   preference list affects the algorithm choices available to the   encoding side, which in turn may make the adherence to the table   above infeasible.  Therefore, compliance with this specification is a   concern throughout the life of the key, starting immediately after   the key generation when the key preferences are first added to a key.   It is generally advisable to position a symmetric algorithm ID of   strength matching the public key at the head of the key preference   list.   Encryption to multiple recipients often results in an unordered   intersection subset.  For example, if the first recipient's set is   {A, B} and the second's is {B, A}, the intersection is an unordered   set of two algorithms, A and B.  In this case, a compliant   application SHOULD choose the stronger encryption algorithm.   Resource constraints, such as limited computational power, is a   likely reason why an application might prefer to use the weakest   algorithm.  On the other side of the spectrum are applications that   can implement every algorithm defined in this document.  Most   applications are expected to fall into either of two categories.  A   compliant application in the second, or strongest, category SHOULD   prefer AES-256 to AES-192.   SHA-1 MUST NOT be used with the ECDSA or the KDF in the ECDH method.   MDC MUST be used when a symmetric encryption key is protected by   ECDH.  None of the ECC methods described in this document are allowed   with deprecated V3 keys.  A compliant application MUST only use   iterated and salted S2K to protect private keys, as defined inSection 3.7.1.3 of [RFC4880], "Iterated and Salted S2K".Jivsov                       Standards Track                   [Page 13]

RFC 6637                     ECC in OpenPGP                    June 2012   Side channel attacks are a concern when a compliant application's use   of the OpenPGP format can be modeled by a decryption or signing   oracle model, for example, when an application is a network service   performing decryption to unauthenticated remote users.  ECC scalar   multiplication operations used in ECDSA and ECDH are vulnerable to   side channel attacks.  Countermeasures can often be taken at the   higher protocol level, such as limiting the number of allowed   failures or time-blinding of the operations associated with each   network interface.  Mitigations at the scalar multiplication level   seek to eliminate any measurable distinction between the ECC point   addition and doubling operations.14.  IANA Considerations   Per this document, IANA has assigned an algorithm number from the   "Public Key Algorithms" range (or the "name space" in the terminology   of [RFC5226]) of the "Pretty Good Privacy (PGP)" registry, created by   [RFC4880].  Two ID numbers have been assigned, as defined inSection5.  The first one, value 19, is already designated for ECDSA and is   currently unused, while the other one, value 18, is new.15.  References15.1.  Normative References   [RFC2119]        Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate                    Requirement Levels",BCP 14,RFC 2119, March 1997.   [RFC4880]        Callas, J., Donnerhacke, L., Finney, H., Shaw, D.,                    and R. Thayer, "OpenPGP Message Format",RFC 4880,                    November 2007.   [SuiteB]         National Security Agency, "NSA Suite B                    Cryptography", March 11, 2010,http://www.nsa.gov/ia/programs/suiteb_cryptography/.   [FIPS-186-3]     National Institute of Standards and Technology, U.S.                    Department of Commerce, "Digital Signature                    Standard", FIPS 186-3, June 2009.   [NIST-SP800-56A] Barker, E., Johnson, D., and M. Smid,                    "Recommendation for Pair-Wise Key Establishment                    Schemes Using Discrete Logarithm Cryptography", NIST                    Special Publication 800-56A Revision 1, March 2007.   [FIPS-180-3]     National Institute of Standards and Technology, U.S.                    Department of Commerce, "Secure Hash Standard                    (SHS)", FIPS 180-3, October 2008.Jivsov                       Standards Track                   [Page 14]

RFC 6637                     ECC in OpenPGP                    June 2012   [RFC3394]        Schaad, J. and R. Housley, "Advanced Encryption                    Standard (AES) Key Wrap Algorithm",RFC 3394,                    September 2002.   [PKCS5]          RSA Laboratories, "PKCS #5 v2.0: Password-Based                    Cryptography Standard", March 25, 1999.   [RFC5226]        Narten, T. and H. Alvestrand, "Guidelines for                    Writing an IANA Considerations Section in RFCs",BCP26,RFC 5226, May 2008.15.2.  Informative References   [KOBLITZ]        N. Koblitz, "A course in number theory and                    cryptography", Chapter VI. Elliptic Curves, ISBN:                    0-387-96576-9, Springer-Verlag, 1987   [RFC6090]        McGrew, D., Igoe, K., and M. Salter, "Fundamental                    Elliptic Curve Cryptography Algorithms",RFC 6090,                    February 2011.   [SEC1]           Standards for Efficient Cryptography Group, "SEC 1:                    Elliptic Curve Cryptography", September 2000.16.  Contributors   Hal Finney provided important criticism on compliance with   [NIST-SP800-56A] and [SuiteB], and pointed out a few other mistakes.17.  Acknowledgment   The author would like to acknowledge the help of many individuals who   kindly voiced their opinions on the IETF OpenPGP Working Group   mailing list, in particular, the help of Jon Callas, David Crick, Ian   G, Werner Koch, and Marko Kreen.Author's Address   Andrey Jivsov   Symantec Corporation   EMail: Andrey_Jivsov@symantec.comJivsov                       Standards Track                   [Page 15]

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