How broken is broken?

The Register runs an article with the title “AES crypto broken by ‘groundbreaking’ attack“. Inside the said article they have the following quote:

This technique is a divide-and-conquer attack. To find an unknown key, they partition all the possible keys into a set of groups. This is possible because AES subkeys only have small differences between rounds. They can then perform a smaller search for the full key because they can reuse partial bits of the key in later phases of the computation.

It’s impressive work but there’s no better cipher to use than AES for now.

So, it’s broken, but not really broken? Is that confusing or what? If not, you are probably versed in the field of cryptography. For the rest of us, there is a very useful update at the bottom of the article, which clears up some confusion:

Vulture Central has been deluged with missives from outraged readers complaining about the use of the word “broken” in the headline. “Broken” in cryptography is the result of any attack that is faster than brute force. The biclique technique described here allows attackers to recover keys up to five times faster than brute-force. AES may not be completely broken, but it’s broken nonetheless.

Today I’ve learned something new.

Big cities suck

I live in a small city of a small country.  And I love it here.  One of the big benefits that a lot of people get really used to is that everything is 10 minutes away.  It would take you only about 20 minutes to get from one side of the city to another.  Most of the people I know who live in big cities have to drive back and forth for hours every day.  Those of them lucky enough to live next to the place they work usually pay a lot of money to have it that way.

Why am I suddenly thinking of how bad big cities are? Because I just watched this YouTube video.

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q4FoAr8i26g]

I understand that the guy chose the place himself and since he is young and alone it probably makes sense.  And I do understand that the video is more about living in tight spaces.  But I still keep thinking of how big cities screw people’s minds.  Not only it’s OK for someone in the modern age and developed country to live in a 78 square foot room (7 square meters), but also to pay $800 USD per month for it!  That’s just wrong.  Even if a lot of people are doing it and even if one gets used to it quickly, it still doesn’t make it right.

 

Kingdom Rush

A couple of days ago I mentioned Kingdom Rush – an even more addictive version of the Desktop Tower Defense game.  Since someone sent me the link I’ve been nothing but a shadow, ignoring my family and wasting shameless amounts of time in the office.  Finally, I’m glad to report that I’ve finished the game and it’s now completely removed from my uncontrollable “to do” list.

If you missed my original mention of the game, or decided that you won’t figure it out because you never played Desktop Tower Defense, or were afraid that it would be too complicated for you to install – you have nothing to worry about.  The game is very simple (note the difference from easy).  You don’t need any prior experience in other games – instructions are sufficient and easy to follow.  And the game is done in Flash, which means it will run in pretty much any modern browser.  Except for the iPad probably.  Give it a try.  And then you can tell me where two days of your life went.