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@inproceedings{1392143, author = {Nemec, Matúš and Klinec, Dušan and Švenda, Petr and Sekan, Peter and Matyáš, Václav}, address = {New York, NY, USA}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the 33rd Annual Computer Security Applications Conference}, doi = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/3134600.3134612}, keywords = {RSA algorithm; cryptographic library; prime generation}, howpublished = {elektronická verze "online"}, language = {eng}, location = {New York, NY, USA}, isbn = {978-1-4503-5345-8}, pages = {162-175}, publisher = {ACM}, title = {Measuring Popularity of Cryptographic Libraries in Internet-Wide Scans}, url = {https://dl.acm.org/citation.cfm?id=3134600}, year = {2017} }
TY - JOUR ID - 1392143 AU - Nemec, Matúš - Klinec, Dušan - Švenda, Petr - Sekan, Peter - Matyáš, Václav PY - 2017 TI - Measuring Popularity of Cryptographic Libraries in Internet-Wide Scans PB - ACM CY - New York, NY, USA SN - 9781450353458 KW - RSA algorithm KW - cryptographic library KW - prime generation UR - https://dl.acm.org/citation.cfm?id=3134600 L2 - https://dl.acm.org/citation.cfm?id=3134612 N2 - We measure the popularity of cryptographic libraries in large datasets of RSA public keys. We do so by improving a recently proposed method based on biases introduced by alternative implementations of prime selection in different cryptographic libraries. We extend the previous work by applying statistical inference to approximate a share of libraries matching an observed distribution of RSA keys in an inspected dataset (e.g., Internet-wide scan of TLS handshakes). The sensitivity of our method is sufficient to detect transient events such as a periodic insertion of keys from a specific library into Certificate Transparency logs and inconsistencies in archived datasets. We apply the method on keys from multiple Internet-wide scans collected in years 2010 through 2017, on Certificate Transparency logs and on separate datasets for PGP keys and SSH keys. The results quantify a strong dominance of OpenSSL with more than 84% TLS keys for Alexa 1M domains, steadily increasing since the first measurement. OpenSSL is even more popular for GitHub client-side SSH keys, with a share larger than 96%. Surprisingly, new certificates inserted in Certificate Transparency logs on certain days contain more than 20% keys most likely originating from Java libraries, while TLS scans contain less than 5% of such keys. Since the ground truth is not known, we compared our measurements with other estimates and simulated different scenarios to evaluate the accuracy of our method. To our best knowledge, this is the first accurate measurement of the popularity of cryptographic libraries not based on proxy information like web server fingerprinting, but directly on the number of observed unique keys. ER -
NEMEC, Matúš, Dušan KLINEC, Petr ŠVENDA, Peter SEKAN and Václav MATYÁŠ. Measuring Popularity of Cryptographic Libraries in Internet-Wide Scans. Online. In \textit{Proceedings of the 33rd Annual Computer Security Applications Conference}. New York, NY, USA: ACM, 2017, p.~162-175. ISBN~978-1-4503-5345-8. Available from: https://dx.doi.org/10.1145/3134600.3134612.
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