We provide the first proof of security for Tandem-DM, one of the oldest and most well-known constructions for turning a block cipher with n-bit block length and 2n-bit key length into a 2n-bit cryptographic hash function. We prove, that when Tandem-DM is instantiated with AES-256, block length 128 bits and key length 256 bits, any adversary that asks less than 2 120.4 queries cannot find a collision with success probability greater than 1/2. We also prove a bound for preimage resistance of Tandem-DM. Interestingly, as there is only one practical construction known turning such an (n, 2n) bit block cipher into a 2n-bit compression function that has provably birthday-type collision resistance (FSE'06, Hirose), Tandem-DM is one out of two constructions that has this desirable feature.
Abstract. This paper studies the application of slide attacks to hash functions. Slide attacks have mostly been used for block cipher cryptanalysis. But, as shown in the current paper, they also form a potential threat for hash functions, namely for sponge-function like structures. As it turns out, certain constructions for hash-function-based MACs can be vulnerable to forgery and even to key recovery attacks. In other cases, we can at least distinguish a given hash function from a random oracle. To illustrate our results, we describe attacks against the Grindahl-256 and Grindahl-512 hash functions. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first cryptanalytic result on Grindahl-512. Furthermore, we point out a slide-based distinguisher attack on a slightly modified version of RadioGatún. We finally discuss simple countermeasures as a defense against slide attacks.
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