SEED
Information about SEED
- For other meanings of seed, see seed (disambiguation).
| SEED | |
| General | |
|---|---|
| KISA | |
| 1998 | |
| Cipher detail | |
| Key size(s):| 128 bits | |
| Block size(s):| 128 bits | |
| Nested Feistel network | |
| 16 | |
SEED is a block cipher developed by the Korean Information Security Agency. It is used broadly throughout South Korean industry, but seldom found elsewhere. It gained popularity in Korea because 40 bit SSL was not considered strong enough (see Transport Layer Security#Early short keys), so the Korean Information Security Agency developed its own standard. However, this decision has limited the competition of web browsers in Korea, as no major SSL libraries or web browsers currently support the SEED algorithm, and users are limited to using ActiveX components with Internet Explorer for secure web sites.[1]
SEED is a 16-round Feistel network with 128-bit blocks and a 128-bit key. It uses two 8 × 8 S-boxes which, like those of SAFER, are derived from discrete exponentiation (in this case, x247 and x251 – plus some "incompatible operations"). It also has some resemblance to MISTY1 in the recursiveness of its structure: the 128-bit full cipher is a Feistel network with an F-function operating on 64-bit halves, while the F-function itself is a Feistel network composed of a G-function operating on 32-bit halves. However the recursion does not extend further because the G-function is not a Feistel network. In the G-function, the 32-bit word is considered as four 8-bit bytes, each of which is passed through one or the other of the S-boxes, then combined in a moderately complex set of boolean functions such that each output bit depends on 3 of the 4 input bytes.
SEED has a fairly complex key schedule, generating its thirty-two 32-bit subkeys through application of its G-function on a series of rotations of the raw key, combined with round constants derived (as in TEA) from the Golden ratio.
References
1. ^ Gen Kanai (2007-01-26). The Cost of Monoculture. Retrieved on 2007-01-29.
2. ^ Kigel, Jaime, and Gad Galili. 1995. Seed development and germination. Books in soils, plants, and the environment. New York: M. Dekker.ISBN 0824792297. Chapter one.
3. ^ Raven, Peter H., Ray Franklin Evert, and Helena Curtis. 1981. Biology of plants. New York, N.Y.: Worth Publishers. page 410.
4. ^ Smith, Welby R. 1993. Orchids of Minnesota. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press. Page 8.
5. ^ Jones, Samuel B., and Arlene E. Luchsinger. 1979. Plant systematics. McGraw-Hill series in organismic biology. New York: McGraw-Hill. Page 195.
6. ^ Cronquist, Arthur (1981). An Integrated System of Classification of Flowering Plants. New York: Columbia University Press, 882. ISBN 0-231-03880-1.
7. ^ Stern, Kingsley R. (1991). Introductory Plant Biology, 5th, Dubuque, IA: Wm. C. Brown Publishers, 131. ISBN 0-697-09947-4.
8. ^ [1]
9. ^ Marinelli, J. (1999) "Ants - The astonishing intimacy between ants & plants." Plants & Gardens News 14 (1). [2]
10. ^ Ricklefs, Robert E. (1993) The Economy of Nature, 3rd ed., p.396. (New York: W. H. Freeman). ISBN 0-7167-2409-X.
11. ^ Bond, W. J.; P. Slingsby (1984). "Collapse of an ant-plant mutualism: The Argentine ant, Iridomyrmex humilis and myrmecochorous Proteaceae". Ecology 65: 1031-1037.
12. ^ [3]
13. ^ Hartmann, Hudson Thomas, and Dale E. Kester. 1983. Plant propagation principles and practices. Englewood Cliffs, N.J.: Prentice-Hall. ISBN 0136810071. Pages 175-77.
14. ^ Patten, D.T. 1978. Productivity and production efficiency of an Upper Sonoran Desert ephemeral community. American Journal of Botany 65: 891-895. [4]
15. ^ Chia Joo Suan, "Seeds of Doubt: Food Safety"
16. ^ Clelland, Mike. "Poisonous Plants and Seeds", Healthy Child Care
17. ^ [5]
18. ^ [6]
19. ^ Roach, John. (2005) "2,000-Year-Old Seed Sprouts, Sapling Is Thriving", National Geographic News, 22 November.
20. ^ Corner, E. J. H. (1966) The Natural History of Palms, p313-314. (Berkeley, CA: University of California Press).
21. ^ Taylor, Thomas N. & Edith L. Taylor. 1993 The Biology and Evolution of Fossil Plants, page 466. (Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice Hall). ISBN 0-13-651589-4.
2. ^ Kigel, Jaime, and Gad Galili. 1995. Seed development and germination. Books in soils, plants, and the environment. New York: M. Dekker.ISBN 0824792297. Chapter one.
3. ^ Raven, Peter H., Ray Franklin Evert, and Helena Curtis. 1981. Biology of plants. New York, N.Y.: Worth Publishers. page 410.
4. ^ Smith, Welby R. 1993. Orchids of Minnesota. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press. Page 8.
5. ^ Jones, Samuel B., and Arlene E. Luchsinger. 1979. Plant systematics. McGraw-Hill series in organismic biology. New York: McGraw-Hill. Page 195.
6. ^ Cronquist, Arthur (1981). An Integrated System of Classification of Flowering Plants. New York: Columbia University Press, 882. ISBN 0-231-03880-1.
7. ^ Stern, Kingsley R. (1991). Introductory Plant Biology, 5th, Dubuque, IA: Wm. C. Brown Publishers, 131. ISBN 0-697-09947-4.
8. ^ [1]
9. ^ Marinelli, J. (1999) "Ants - The astonishing intimacy between ants & plants." Plants & Gardens News 14 (1). [2]
10. ^ Ricklefs, Robert E. (1993) The Economy of Nature, 3rd ed., p.396. (New York: W. H. Freeman). ISBN 0-7167-2409-X.
11. ^ Bond, W. J.; P. Slingsby (1984). "Collapse of an ant-plant mutualism: The Argentine ant, Iridomyrmex humilis and myrmecochorous Proteaceae". Ecology 65: 1031-1037.
12. ^ [3]
13. ^ Hartmann, Hudson Thomas, and Dale E. Kester. 1983. Plant propagation principles and practices. Englewood Cliffs, N.J.: Prentice-Hall. ISBN 0136810071. Pages 175-77.
14. ^ Patten, D.T. 1978. Productivity and production efficiency of an Upper Sonoran Desert ephemeral community. American Journal of Botany 65: 891-895. [4]
15. ^ Chia Joo Suan, "Seeds of Doubt: Food Safety"
16. ^ Clelland, Mike. "Poisonous Plants and Seeds", Healthy Child Care
17. ^ [5]
18. ^ [6]
19. ^ Roach, John. (2005) "2,000-Year-Old Seed Sprouts, Sapling Is Thriving", National Geographic News, 22 November.
20. ^ Corner, E. J. H. (1966) The Natural History of Palms, p313-314. (Berkeley, CA: University of California Press).
21. ^ Taylor, Thomas N. & Edith L. Taylor. 1993 The Biology and Evolution of Fossil Plants, page 466. (Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice Hall). ISBN 0-13-651589-4.
External links
- SEED introduction (English)
- Blog about SEED in Korea
- Explanation of how ActiveX controls are used in conjunction with SEED for Korean e-commerce
- SEED official specification document (English)
- RFC 4269: The SEED encryption algorithm (obsoletes RFC 4009)
- RFC 4010: Use of the SEED Encryption Algorithm in Cryptographic Message Syntax (CMS)
- RFC 4196: The SEED Cipher Algorithm and Its Use with IPsec
A ripe red jalapeño cut open to show the seeds
A seed ] is a small embryonic plant enclosed in a covering called the seed coat, usually with some stored food. It is the product of the ripened ovule of gymnosperm and angiosperm plants which occurs after fertilization and some growth within the mother plant. The formation of the seed completes the process of reproduction in seed plants (started with the development of flowers and pollination), with the embryo developed from the zygote and the seed coat from the integuments of the ovule.
Seeds have been an important development in the reproduction and spread of flowering plants, relative to more primitive plants like mosses, ferns and liverworts, which do not have seeds and use other means to propagate themselves. This can be seen by the success of seed plants (both gymnosperms and angiosperms) in dominating biological niches on land, from forests to grasslands both in hot and cold climates.
Seed also has a general meaning that predates the above - anything that can be sown i.e. "seed" potatoes, "seeds" of corn or sunflower "seeds". In the case of sunflower and corn "seeds", what is sown is the seed enclosed in a shell or hull, and the potato is a tuber.
Seed structure
A typical seed includes three basic parts: (1) an embryo, (2) a supply of nutrients for the embryo, and (3) a seed coat.The embryo is an immature plant from which a new plant will grow under proper conditions. The embryo has one cotyledon or seed leaf in monocotyledons, two cotyledons in almost all dicotyledons and two or more in gymnosperms. The radicle is the embryonic root. The plumule is the embryonic shoot. The embryonic stem above the point of attachment of the cotyledon(s) is the epicotyl. The embryonic stem below the point of attachment is the hypocotyl.
Within the seed, there usually is a store of nutrients for the seedling that will grow from the embryo. The form of the stored nutrition varies depending on the kind of plant. In angiosperms, the stored food begins as a tissue called the endosperm, which is derived from the parent plant via double fertilization. The usually triploid endosperm is rich in oil or starch and protein. In gymnosperms, such as conifers, the food storage tissue is part of the female gametophyte, a haploid tissue. In some species, the embryo is embedded in the endosperm or female gametophyte, which the seedling will use upon germination. In others, the endosperm is absorbed by the embryo as the latter grows within the developing seed, and the cotyledons of the embryo become filled with this stored food. At maturity, seeds of these species have no endosperm and are termed exalbuminous seeds. Some exalbuminous seeds are bean, pea, oak, walnut, squash, sunflower, and radish. Seeds with an endosperm at maturity are termed albuminous seeds. Most monocots (e.g. grasses and palms) and many dicots (e.g. brazil nut and castor bean) have albuminous seeds. All gymnosperm seeds are albuminous.
The seed coat (or testa) develops from the tissue, the integument, originally surrounding the ovule. The seed coat in the mature seed can be a paper-thin layer (e.g. peanut) or something more substantial (e.g. thick and hard in honey locust and coconut). The seed coat helps protect the embryo from mechanical injury and from drying out.
In addition to the three basic seed parts, some seeds have an appendage on the seed coat such an aril (as in yew and nutmeg) or an elaiosome (as in Corydalis) or hairs (as in cotton). There may also be a scar on the seed coat, called the hilum; it is where the seed was attached to the ovary wall by the funiculus.
Seed production

Immature Elm seeds.
Kinds of seeds
There are a number of modifications to seeds by different groups of plants. One example is that of the so-called stone fruits (such as the peach), where a hardened fruit layer ( the endocarp) surrounds the actual seed and is fused to it.Many structures commonly referred to as "seeds" are actually dry fruits. Sunflower seeds are sold commercially while still enclosed within the hard wall of the fruit, which must be split open to reach the seed.
Seed development
The seed, which is an embryo with two points of growth (one of which forms the stems the other the roots) is enclosed in a seed coat with some food reserves. Angiosperm seeds consist of three genetically distinct constituents: (1) the embryo formed from the zygote, (2) the endosperm, which is normally triploid, (3) the seed coat from tissue derived from the maternal tissue of the ovule. In angiosperms, the process of seed development begins with double fertilization and involves the fusion of the egg and sperm nuclei into a zygote. The second part of this process is the fusion of the polar nuclei with a second sperm cell nucleus, thus forming a primary endosperm. Right after fertilization the zygote is mostly inactive but the primary endosperm divides rapidly to form the endosperm tissue. This tissue becomes the food that the young plant will consume until the roots have developed after germination or it develops into a hard seed coat. The seed coat forms from the two integuments or outer layers of cells of the ovule, which derive from tissue from the mother plant, the inner integument forms the tegmen and the outer forms the testa. When the seed coat forms from only one layer it is also called the testa, though not all such testa are homologous from one species to the next.In gymnosperms, the two sperm cells transferred from the pollen do not develop seed by double fertilization but instead only one sperm fertilizes the egg while the other is not used. The seed is composed of the embryo (the result of fertilization) and tissue from the mother plant, which also form a cone around the seed in coniferous plants like Pine and Spruce.
The ovules after fertilization develop into the seeds; the main parts of the ovule are the funicle; which attaches the ovule to the placenta, the nucellus; the main region of the ovule were the embryo sac develops, the micropyle; A small pore or opening in the ovule where the pollen tube usually enters during the process of fertilization, and the chalaza; the base of the ovule opposite the micropyle, where integument and nucellus are joined together.[2]
The shape of the ovules as they develop often affects the finale shape of the seeds. Plants generally produce ovules of four shapes: the most common shape is called anatropous, with a curved shape. Orthotropous ovules are straight with all the parts of the ovule lined up in a long row producing an uncurved seed. Campylotropous ovules have a curved embryo sac often giving the seed a tight “c” shape. The last ovule shape is called amphitropous, where the ovule is partly inverted and turned back 90 degrees on its stalk or funicle.
In the majority of flowering plants the zygotes first division is transversely orientated in regards to the long axis and this establishes the polarity of the embryo. The upper or chalazal pole becomes the main area of growth of the embryo, while the lower or micropylar pole produces the stalk-like suspensor that attaches to the micropyle. The suspensor absorbs and manufacturers nutrients from the endosperm that are utilized during the embryos growth.[3]
The embryo is made up of different parts, the epicotyle will grow into the shoot, the radicle with grow into the primary root, the hypocotyl connects the epicotyle and the radicle, the cotyledons form the seed leaves, the testa or seed coat forms the outer covering of the seed. The monocotyledonous corn plant has other structures, instead of the hypocotyle-epicotyle, it has a coleoptile that forms the first leaf and connects to the coleorhiza that connects to the primary root and adventitious roots form from the sides. The seeds of corn are constructed with these structures; pericarp, scutellum (single large cotyledon) it absorbs nutrients from the endosperm, endosperm, plumule, radicle, coleoptile and coleorhiza - these last two structures are sheath-like and enclose the plumule and radicle, acting as a protective covering. The testa or seed coat of both monocots and dicots is often marked with patterns and textured markings, or it can have wings or tufts of hair.
Seed size and seed set
Seeds are very diverse in size. The dust-like orchid seeds are the smallest with about one million seeds per gram. Embryotic seeds have immature embryos and no significant energy reserves. They are myco-heterotrophs, depending on mycorrhizal fungi for nutrition during germination and the early growth of the seedling, in fact some terrestrial Orchid seedlings spend the first few years of their life deriving energy from the fungus and do not produce green leaves.[4] At over 20 kg, the largest seed is the coco de mer. Plants that produce smaller seeds can generate many more seeds while plants with larger seeds invest more resources into those seeds and normally produce fewer seeds. Small seeds are quicker to ripen and can be dispersed sooner, so fall blooming plants often have small seeds. Many annual plants produce great quantities of smaller seeds, this helps to ensure that at least a few will end in a favorable place for growth. Herbaceous perennials and woody plants often have larger seeds, they can produce seeds over many years, and larger seeds have more energy reserves for germination and seedling growth and produce larger, more established seedlings.Seed functions
Seeds serve several functions for the plants that produce them. Key among these functions are nourishment of the embryo, dispersal to a new location, and dormancy during unfavorable conditions. Seeds fundamentally are a means of reproduction and most seeds are the product of sexual reproduction which produces a remixing of genetic material and phenotype variability that natural selection acts on.Seed dispersal
Often, seed dispersal is attributed mainly to fruits, however many seeds aid in their own dispersal. Some kinds of seeds are dispersed while still inside a fruit or cone, which later opens or disintegrates to release the seeds. Other seeds are expelled or released from the fruit prior to dispersal. For example, milkweeds produce a fruit type, known as a follicle,[6] that splits open along one side to release the seeds. Iris capsules split into three "valves" to release their seeds.[7]
By wind

Dandelion seeds (achenes) can be carried long distances by the wind.
- Many seeds (e.g. maple, pine) have a wing that aids in wind dispersal.
- The dustlike seeds of orchids are carried efficiently by the wind.
- Some seeds, (e.g. dandelion, milkweed, poplar) have hairs that aid in wind dispersal.
By water
- Some plants, such as Mucuna and Dioclea, produce buoyant seeds termed sea-beans or drift seeds because they float in rivers to the oceans and wash up on beaches [8].
By animals
- Seeds (burrs) with barbs or hooks (e.g. acaena, burdock, dock which attach to animal fur or feathers, and then drop off later.
- Seeds with a fleshy covering (e.g. apple, cherry, juniper) are eaten by animals (birds, mammals) which then disperse these seeds in their droppings.
- Seeds (nuts) which are an attractive long-term storable food resource for animals (e.g. acorns, hazelnut, walnut); the seeds are stored some distance from the parent plant, and some escape being eaten if the animal stores hold them.
Seed dormancy and protection
- Further information: Seed hibernation
- Hard seed coats or physical dormancy results from seeds that are impermeable to water or the exchange of gases. In some the seed coats physically prevents the seedling from growing.
- Immature embryos were some plants release their seeds before the tissues of the embryos have fully differentiated, and the seeds ripen after they take in water while on the ground, germination can be delayed from a few weeks to a few months.
- Morphological dormancy were seeds are have fully differentiated embryos that need to yet grow more before seed germination, the embryos are not yet fully developed.
- Morphophysiological dormancy seeds with underdeveloped embryos, and in addition have physiological components to dormancy. These seeds therefore require a dormancy-breaking treatments as well as a period of time to develop fully grown embryos.
- Drying, some plants including a number of grasses and those from seasonally arid regions need a period of drying before they will germinate, the seeds are released but need to have a lower moister content before germination can begin. The seeds need to dry first then take in water before germination begins, if the seeds take in water right after being released they will not germinate.
- Light sensitivity or photoblastic seeds need a period of darkness or light to germinate. In species with thin seed coats, light may be able to penetrate into the dormant embryo. The presence of light or the absence of light may trigger the germination process, inhibiting germination in some seeds buried too deeply or in others not buried in the soil.
- Physiological dormancy prevents seed germinations until the chemical inhibitors are broken down or are no longer produced by the seed, often physiological dormancy is broken by a period of cool moist conditions, normally below (+4C) 39F, or in the case of many species in Ranunculaceae and a few others,(-5C) 24F. Other chemicals that prevent germination are washed out of the seeds by rainwater or snow melt. Abscisic acid is usually the growth inhibitor in seeds and its production can be affected by light.
- Combinational dormancy Many seeds have more than one type of dormancy,[12] some Iris species have both hard impermeable seeds coats and Physiological dormancy, other seeds like Peony species have multiply types of physiological dormancy
Other methods used to assist in the germination of seeds that have dormancy include prechilling, predrying, daily alternation of temperature, light exposure, potassium nitrate, the use of Plant growth regulators like Gibberellins, cytokinins, ethylene, thiourea, sodium hypochlorite plus others.[13]
Many garden plants have seeds that will germinate readily as soon as they have water and are warm enough, though their wild ancestors may have had dormancy, these cultivated plants lack seed dormancy. After many generations of selective pressure by plant breeders and gardeners dormancy has been selected out.
For annuals, seeds are a way for the species to survive dry or cold seasons. Ephemeral plants are usually annuals that can go from seed to seed in as few as six weeks.[14]
Not all seeds undergo a period of dormancy. Seeds of some mangroves are viviparous, they begin to germinate while still attached to the parent. The large, heavy root allows the seed to penetrate into the ground when it falls.
Embryo nourishment
Seeds protect and nourish the embryo or baby plant. Seeds usually give a seedling a faster start than a sporling from a spore gets because of the larger food reserves in the seed.Seed germination
Origin and evolution
The origin of seed plants is a problem that still remains unsolved. However, more and more data tends to place this origin in the middle Devonian. The description in 2004 of the proto-seed Runcaria heinzelinii in the Givetian of Belgium is an indication of that ancient origin of seed-plants. As with modern ferns, most land plants before this time reproduced by sending spoor into the air, that would land and become whole new plants.The first "true" seeds are described from the upper Devonian, which is probably the theater of their true first evolutionary radiation. The seed plants progressively became one of the major elements of nearly all ecosystems.
Economic importance

A variety of bean seeds.
Edible seeds
- Further information: List of edible seeds
Many seeds are edible (such as grape, pumpkin, and sunflower seed) and are considered by some as healthy to eat. The majority of human calories comes from seeds, especially from cereals, legumes and nuts. Seeds also provide most cooking oils, many beverages and spices and some important food additives.
Seeds are used to propagate many crops such as cereals, legumes, forest trees, turfgrasses and pasture grasses.
Seeds are also eaten by animals, and are fed to livestock. Many seeds are used as birdseed.
Poison and food safety
While some seeds are considered by some as healthy to eat, other seeds may be harmful or poisonous,[15] Plants and seeds often contain chemical compounds to discourage herbivores and seed predators. In some cases, these compounds simply taste bad (such as in mustard), but other compounds are toxic, or breakdown into toxic compounds within the digestive system. Children, being smaller than adults, are more susceptible to poisoning or death by plants and seeds.[16] One should be satisfied with reliable food safety information before choosing to eat any particular seeds.An infamously deadly poison, ricin, comes from seeds of the castor bean. Reported lethal doses are anywhere from two to eight seeds,[7][8] though only a few deaths have been reported when castor beans have been ingested by animals.[17]
In addition, seeds containing amygdalin; apple, apricot, bitter almond[9], peach, plum, quince, and others, when consumed in significant amounts, may result in cyanide toxicity[10], though its not likely that enough could be eaten to cause serous harm to most healthy people.[18] Other seeds than contain poisons include annona, cherry, cotton, custard apple, datura, uncooked durian, golden chain, horse-chestnut, larkspur, locoweed, lychee, nectarine, rambutan, rosary pea, sour sop, sugar apple, wisteria, and yew.[11][12] Another seed poison is strychnine.
Other uses

Flax seed oil (in bottles) and coconut oil (in jars in the middle).
Many important nonfood oils are extracted from seeds. Linseed oil is used in paints. Oil from jojoba and crambe are similar to whale oil.
Seeds are the source of some medicines including castor oil, tea tree oil and the discredited cancer drug, Laetrile.
Many seeds have been used as beads in necklaces and rosaries including Job's tears, Chinaberry and rosary pea. However, the latter two are also poisonous.
Other seed uses include:
- Seeds once used as weights for balances.
- Seeds used as toys by children, such as for the game conker.
- Resin from Clusia rosea seeds used to caulk boats.
- Nematicide from milkweed seeds.
- Cottonseed meal used as animal feed and fertilizer.
Trivia

The massive fruit of the coco de mer.
- The oldest viable carbon-14-dated seed that has grown into a plant was a Judean date palm seed about 2,000 years old, recovered from excavations at Herod the Great's palace on Masada in Israel. It was germinated in 2005. [19]
- The largest seed is produced by the coco de mer, or "double coconut palm", Lodoicea maldivica. The entire fruit may weigh up to 23 kilograms (50 pounds) and usually contains a single seed.[20]
- The earliest fossil seeds are around 365 million years old from the Late Devonian of West Virginia. The seeds are preserved immature ovules of the plant Elkinsia polymorpha.[21]
See also
- Biological dispersal
- Germination
- List of edible seeds
- Seed company
- Seed predation
- Seedbed
- Seedling
- Stratification
References
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External links
- List of Common Botanical Seed Names
- The Seed Site: collecting, storing, sowing, germinating, and exchanging seeds, with pictures of seeds, seedpods and seedlings.
- The Seed Biology Place seed structure, dormany, evolution, ecology, etc.
- Flavon's Secret Flower Garden - Pictures of Japanese plant seeds, fruits and etc.
- The Millenium Seed Bank Project Kew Garden's ambitious preservation project
Seed, seeds or seeding may refer to:
..... Click the link for more information.
- Seed, an encased plant embryo
- SEEDS, a non-governmental organization
- A poetic term for sperm
- Bija, literally "seed", a metaphor for the origin or cause of things
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In cryptography, the key size (alternatively key length) is the size of the digits used to create an encrypted text; it is therefore also a measure of the number of possible keys which can be used in a cipher, and the number of keys which must be tested to 'break' the
..... Click the link for more information.
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block size. Both the input (plaintext) and output (ciphertext) are the same length; the output cannot be shorter than the input — this is logically required by the Pigeonhole principle and the fact that the cipher must be invertible — and it is simply undesirable for
..... Click the link for more information.
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In cryptography, a Feistel cipher is a block cipher with a symmetric structure, named after IBM cryptographer Horst Feistel; it is also commonly known as a Feistel network. A large proportion of block ciphers use the scheme, including the Data Encryption Standard (DES).
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block cipher is a symmetric key cipher which operates on fixed-length groups of bits, termed blocks, with an unvarying transformation. When encrypting, a block cipher might take a (for example) 128-bit block of plaintext as input, and output a corresponding 128-bit block
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Motto
홍익인간(弘益人間) 널리 인간을 이롭게 하?
Anthem
Aegukga (애국가; 愛國歌)
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홍익인간(弘益人間) 널리 인간을 이롭게 하?
Anthem
Aegukga (애국가; 愛國歌)
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A web browser is a software application that enables a user to display and interact with text, images, videos, music and other information typically located on a Web page at a website on the World Wide Web or a local area network.
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ActiveX is Microsoft technology used for developing reusable object oriented software components. ActiveX is an alternate name for OLE automation (OLE - Object Linking and Embedding), not a separate technology.
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Windows Internet Explorer (formerly Microsoft Internet Explorer abbreviated MSIE), commonly abbreviated to IE, is a series of proprietary graphical web browsers developed by Microsoft and included as part of the Microsoft Windows line of operating systems
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In cryptography, a Feistel cipher is a block cipher with a symmetric structure, named after IBM cryptographer Horst Feistel; it is also commonly known as a Feistel network. A large proportion of block ciphers use the scheme, including the Data Encryption Standard (DES).
..... Click the link for more information.
..... Click the link for more information.
block size. Both the input (plaintext) and output (ciphertext) are the same length; the output cannot be shorter than the input — this is logically required by the Pigeonhole principle and the fact that the cipher must be invertible — and it is simply undesirable for
..... Click the link for more information.
..... Click the link for more information.
In cryptography, the key size (alternatively key length) is the size of the digits used to create an encrypted text; it is therefore also a measure of the number of possible keys which can be used in a cipher, and the number of keys which must be tested to 'break' the
..... Click the link for more information.
..... Click the link for more information.
In cryptography, a substitution box (or S-box) is a basic component of symmetric key algorithms. In block ciphers, they are typically used to obscure the relationship between the plaintext and the ciphertext — Shannon's property of confusion.
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SAFER (Secure And Fast Encryption Routine) is the name of a family of block ciphers designed primarily by James Massey (one of the designers of IDEA) on behalf of Cylink Corporation.
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Exponentiation is a mathematical operation, written an, involving two numbers, the base a and the exponent n.
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- ''MISTY redirects here. For other meanings, see Misty
MISTY1
General
Matsui, Ichikawa, Sorimachi, Tokita, Yamagishi
1995
Camellia, MISTY2, KASUMI
CRYPTREC, NESSIE
Cipher detail
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A Boolean function describes how to determine a Boolean value output based on some logical calculation from Boolean inputs. These play a basic role in questions of complexity theory as well as the design of circuits and chips for digital computers.
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key schedule is an algorithm that, given the key, calculates the subkeys for these rounds.
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Some types of key schedules
- Some ciphers have simple key schedules.
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TEA
General
Roger Needham, David Wheeler
1994
XTEA
Cipher detail
Key size(s):| 128 bits
Block size(s):| 64 bits
Feistel network
variable; recommended 64 Feistel rounds (32 cycles)
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Two Feistel rounds (one cycle) of TEA
General
Roger Needham, David Wheeler
1994
XTEA
Cipher detail
Key size(s):| 128 bits
Block size(s):| 64 bits
Feistel network
variable; recommended 64 Feistel rounds (32 cycles)
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golden section is a line segment sectioned into two according to the golden ratio. The total length a+b is to the longer segment a as a
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block cipher is a symmetric key cipher which operates on fixed-length groups of bits, termed blocks, with an unvarying transformation. When encrypting, a block cipher might take a (for example) 128-bit block of plaintext as input, and output a corresponding 128-bit block
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3-Way
General
Joan Daemen
1994
NOEKEON
BaseKing
Cipher detail
Key size(s):| 96 bits
Block size(s):| 96 bits
Substitution-permutation network
11
Best public cryptanalysis|-| colspan=2 | related-key attack
In cryptography,
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General
Joan Daemen
1994
NOEKEON
BaseKing
Cipher detail
Key size(s):| 96 bits
Block size(s):| 96 bits
Substitution-permutation network
11
Best public cryptanalysis|-| colspan=2 | related-key attack
In cryptography,
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AES
General
Vincent Rijmen, Joan Daemen
1998
Square
Anubis, Grand Cru
AES winner, CRYPTREC, NESSIE
Cipher detail
Key size(s):| 128, 192 or 256 bits[1]
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The SubBytes step, one of four stages in a round of AES
General
Vincent Rijmen, Joan Daemen
1998
Square
Anubis, Grand Cru
AES winner, CRYPTREC, NESSIE
Cipher detail
Key size(s):| 128, 192 or 256 bits[1]
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Akelarre
General
G. Álvarez, D. de la Guía, F. Montoya, A. Peinado
1996
IDEA, RC5
Cipher detail
Key size(s):| 128 bits
Block size(s):| 128 bits
Substitution-permutation network
4
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General
G. Álvarez, D. de la Guía, F. Montoya, A. Peinado
1996
IDEA, RC5
Cipher detail
Key size(s):| 128 bits
Block size(s):| 128 bits
Substitution-permutation network
4
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Anubis
General
Vincent Rijmen and Paulo S. L. M. Barreto
2000
Rijndael
Cipher detail
Key size(s):| 128 to 320 bits in steps of 32 bits
Block size(s):| 128 bits
substitution-permutation network
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General
Vincent Rijmen and Paulo S. L. M. Barreto
2000
Rijndael
Cipher detail
Key size(s):| 128 to 320 bits in steps of 32 bits
Block size(s):| 128 bits
substitution-permutation network
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ARIA
General
2003
AES
South Korean standard
Cipher detail
Key size(s):| 128, 192, or 256 bits
Block size(s):| 128 bits
Substitution-permutation network
12, 14, or 16
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General
2003
AES
South Korean standard
Cipher detail
Key size(s):| 128, 192, or 256 bits
Block size(s):| 128 bits
Substitution-permutation network
12, 14, or 16
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BaseKing
General
Joan Daemen
1994
NOEKEON
3-Way
Cipher detail
Key size(s):| 192 bits
Block size(s):| 192 bits
Substitution-permutation network
11
Best public cryptanalysis|-| colspan=2 | related-key attack, power analysis
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General
Joan Daemen
1994
NOEKEON
3-Way
Cipher detail
Key size(s):| 192 bits
Block size(s):| 192 bits
Substitution-permutation network
11
Best public cryptanalysis|-| colspan=2 | related-key attack, power analysis
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Blowfish
General
Bruce Schneier
1993
Twofish
Cipher detail
Key size(s):| 32-448 bits in steps of 8 bits; default 128 bits
Block size(s):| 64 bits
Feistel network
16
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The round function (Feistel function) of Blowfish
General
Bruce Schneier
1993
Twofish
Cipher detail
Key size(s):| 32-448 bits in steps of 8 bits; default 128 bits
Block size(s):| 64 bits
Feistel network
16
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Cryptomeria cipher
General
4C Entity
2003
DES
CSS
Cipher detail
Key size(s):| 56 bits
Block size(s):| 64 bits
Feistel network
10
The
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The Feistel function of the Cryptomeria cipher algorithm.
General
4C Entity
2003
DES
CSS
Cipher detail
Key size(s):| 56 bits
Block size(s):| 64 bits
Feistel network
10
The
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Camellia
General
Mitsubishi, NTT
2000
E2, MISTY1
CRYPTREC, NESSIE
Cipher detail
Key size(s):| 128, 192 or 256 bits
Block size(s):| 128 bits
Feistel network
18 or 24
In cryptography, Camellia
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General
Mitsubishi, NTT
2000
E2, MISTY1
CRYPTREC, NESSIE
Cipher detail
Key size(s):| 128, 192 or 256 bits
Block size(s):| 128 bits
Feistel network
18 or 24
In cryptography, Camellia
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