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A history of elliptic curves in tweets

54 points| beefhash | 5 years ago |vnhacker.blogspot.com

16 comments

order

lisper|5 years ago

This is cute, but I would much rather see this history written out as a serious non-tweety article. There is a ton of fascinating and useful information hiding underneath the humor.

mhh__|5 years ago

Go and read a maths textbook then?

I'm not being facetious, some books are much less Theorem Lemma Proof (and nothing else) than others.

asutekku|5 years ago

There are a lot of other mediums that explain it differently. Not everything has to be written in a dry textbook flavour.

AQXt|5 years ago

> NSA: Use our curves. They were selected randomly. Promise, wink wink.

Here's a better explanation about this cryptic tweet:

Backdoors in NIST elliptic curves

Of particular concern are the NIST standard elliptic curves. There is a concern that these were some-how “cooked” to facilitate an NSA backdoor into elliptic curve cryptography. The suspicion is that while the vast majority of elliptic curves are secure, these ones were deliberately chosen as having a mathematical weakness known only to the NSA.

https://miracl.com/blog/backdoors-in-nist-elliptic-curves/

vessenes|5 years ago

I’m not a bernsteintheist, but I must be a little bit of one after all, because I was like “hey, he went to a lot of work to show he had nothing up his sleeve..”

Lisper here says that he wished for a serious writeup, I agree — right now this is a set of in-jokes; it would make a fantastic Quanta Magazine article, or two, or n..

MrXOR|5 years ago

Shor: Are you sure?

NSA: Antoine Joux > Quantum Computers, Like him!

Crown Sterling: We sell CADO-NFS™ for breaking ECDSA of Nakamoto's funny money.

To be continued ...

zackmorris|5 years ago

I wish I could find a good primer on elliptic integrals. They come up constantly in magnetic fields and are impractically hard to solve. I mean you can do it, and I've seen it done, but give myself 5% odds of pulling it off myself. My feeling is that this is why only a handful of magnetic field equations are provided in textbooks.

peter_d_sherman|5 years ago

Utterly brilliant!

A great mathematical mind -- meets a great ability to summarize the works of previous mathematicians (not easy to do!)!

Worth re-reading in the future!