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Zero Knowledge Trust? (was Re: Very funny, Polyanna :-( [namespace pollution])
[email protected] said:
> What I see
> as desirable for such people is that their mail is encrypted whenever
> possible, but they don't have to do anything to make it happen. This
> means that the current web of trust scheme is not an applicable model,
> because these people have defined *no* trusted paths at all.
No, you want to give the user the option to sign and/or encrypt the
message. Just like I can optionally sigh a letter, or optionally
write it on a postcard vs. putting it in an envelope. It should be an
option, not a mandate. It *shouldn't* be automagic. It should be
configurable. It should give the user a choice. Maybe that user
decides "encrypt all the time"... That is his/her perogative to do
so.
> We need some relatively trustworthy mechanism for getting pgp keys
> that will foil a denial-of-service attack - either the one I suggested
No, this is not a reasonable goal. No, let me rephrase that. This is
a reasonable goal, but the current implementation of PGP is not the
answer. If you want zero-knowledge authentication of total strangers,
then you *require* a certification hierarchy, and the most effiecient
is one similar to that defined in RFC 1422.
PGP has a more grass roots method of determining key validity. Let me
give you an example where PGP *works* -- Today. Say, for example,
that I own a retail store. I print my key on all my receipts, and
anyone can get it. It is published widely, so basically there is no
easy way to spoof it. But this doesn't matter. The only reason I use
my key is because I want to be able to certify customer's keys. Ok, a
customer comes in and gives me, somehow, a credit-card and a PGP key.
I can validate the credit card, and if it validates, then I sign this
key. Now, anytime this person wants to buy something, all they have
to do is sign an order slip with their key, and I can validate it, and
I know that this is a "valid" customer.
There is no way to perform a denial of service attack (except load me
down with bogus email, but lets disregard that attack). You can't
forge a PGP key, and I only accept keys that I've certified myself.
Ok, maybe you don't like that idea. Ok, say that VISA starts signing
PGP keys for it's customers. I can get the VISA Public Key directly
from VISA, then I know that any key signed by VISA is a valid key, and
I should accept orders from them. Same thing. No way to spoof it.
However, all of these require some out-of-band communication to make
sure you have the real key. Unfortunately, *every* Privacy Enhanced
Mail system has this *feature* (or mis-feature, or bug, or however you
feel like looking at it).
> To me it looks like this has to be done by heavy-handed control
> coming from the keyserver admins, though I'd prefer that there
> was a more democratic way. Please suggest anything you think is
> appropriate...
Basically, what you want is the RFC 1422 Certification Tree. With
that tree, you can verify the authenticity of a key with zero
knowledge about that tree. The only knowledge you need to know a
priori is the root key of the tree.
Before many people start responding to me saying that the 1422 CA Tree
is a Bad Thing, let me state for the record that I believe that there
are valid uses for the tree. What Graham wants is a valid usage of
the tree. What I am saying, however, is that there are other uses for
other trust mechanisms.
Graham: It is not the keyserver's job to certify keys. It never has
been, and I still believe that it shouldn't be its job. However, it
sounds like you are requesting that PGP have imbedded in it knowledge
about the RFC 1422 Hierarchy. I believe this is a valid goal, and
should be pursued. In fact, the PEM-DEV group is looking at adding
alternative turst models to the PEM system, which would merge the
current PGP web-of-trust model with the current PEM Strict Hierarchy
model, blending them into something which will solve both Graham's
problem of zero-knowledge trust, and also allow my retailer example to
work without all the overhead of applying to ISOC to get into the
tree.
What do people think?
-derek
Derek Atkins, SB '93 MIT EE, G MIT Media Laboratory
Member, MIT Student Information Processing Board (SIPB)
Home page: http://www.mit.edu:8001/people/warlord/home_page.html
[email protected] PP-ASEL N1NWH PGP key available