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Wikipedia:WikiProject Cryptography

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The aim of WikiProject Cryptography is to help editors working on cryptography articles by providing a repository of information and resources, and providing a place for discussions that affect more than one article.

Article alerts (watch)

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Articles to be merged

Articles to be split

Articles for creation

  • 13 Nov 2024Draft:HashKey Exchange (talk · edit · hist) submitted for AfC by Fizziest (t · c) was declined by Ca (t · c) on 24 Nov 2024

Discussions

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  • Most discussions are done on the talk page of this page.

Statistics

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Lists and categories

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Editor oriented lists

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Reader oriented lists

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Recognized content

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Good articles

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Former good articles

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Did you know? articles

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In the News articles

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Some open tasks

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Current tasks for Wikipedia:WikiProject Cryptography


  • Start from scratch:        
  • Expansion / stubs:

see: Category:Cryptography stubs

  • Verification:
    • None currently
  • Images:
    • None currently


Participants

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You may place {{User WikiProject Cryptography}} on your user page to display the following userbox:

This template will add your user page to:

Active participants

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Users who have not made any edit on a page (or talk page) relevant to the WikiProject for the last 3 years have been moved to the inactive list below on 15 th August 2014, with User:MemberBot.

  1. User:Dannyniu - Interested in lattice-based post-quantum cryptography
  2. ww
  3. NealMcB
  4. Noel - mostly interested in the history of cryptography, particularly its influence on WWII, but also have some interest in Internet-related stuff
  5. Arnold Reinhold
  6. Elonka Dunin (also User:Elonka) - Famous unsolved codes, history of cryptography, pencil and paper techniques, steganography, Al Qaeda codes, encrypted sculptures, cryptography in pop culture, code challenges
  7. DRLB - ECC, Provable security.
  8. Intgr
  9. Hut 8.5 - history of cryptography, classical cryptography
  10. Ntsimp - I know a lot about the math, but I'm most interested in the cryptanalysis of block ciphers
  11. AchedDamiman 00:22, 23 May 2007 (UTC) Codemaker and Codebreaker Ultra-Pro.
  12. Trekphiler - mostly WWI- & WW2-era applications & impacts.
  13. SV1XV (talk) - General interest in classical (paper & pencil) cryptography. User of PGP.
  14. Melab-1 00:53, 8 July 2008 (UTC)~[reply]
  15. TedColes Cryptography up to the end of WWII
  16. Nageh (talk · contribs) Everything from theory to protocol design. 21:15, 2 September 2010 (UTC)[reply]
  17. Doctorhook Number theory related to cryptography, mathematical aspects of cryptography, history of cryptography, assorted other random stuff
  18. Frank Flanagan Hardware public key systems, side channel attacks
  19. JCAla
  20. Flexdream Applications of cryptography.
  21. Dewey420
  22. The Grumpy Hacker (talk) 17:00, 5 October 2012 (UTC) // "I'm interested in all kinds of astronomy."[reply]
  23. RobertHannah89 - Modern cryptography, complexity theory, etc. referencing articles, adding important or interesting results, etc. 07:57, 12 October 2012 (UTC)[reply]
  24. irahulpandey
  25. Qscgy256: Pretty much any cryptography topics.
  26. OzLind: Mathematician; PGP & Hashing
  27. BIAOXYZ: Theoretical aspects of cryptography: current - Functional Encryption; before - Secure Multi-party Computation.
  28. Carnivorous Bunny (talk)
  29. The Yeti
  30. Luiz Carvalho - Elliptic Curve Cryptography and Number Theory
  31. NCG - working on an article on offline/online signature. Talk to me if you want to join.
  32. User:GLDNONE - Chartography + Forensic Archaeology, Mapped and Painted Ciphers, Trove and Artifact Location, Numerology, Cracked Kryptos K5 and locations, Knights Templar Codes and Parchments, Confirmed Beale and Peralta / Lost Dutchman Solves (see Beale Ciphers Wiki Page for full description). Contact for more information and or collaborations on unbroken solves of antiquity or of older nature.
  33. Cryptic Scripture - FODSZQUJPO JT CFBVUJGVM (talk)
  34. JudgeGregg - I'm not a crypto-specialist, but I know how to write texts that non-specialists can understand. A significant part of articles in the scope of this project seems to have a problem with just that. Apologies if I get something wrong in my edits. Any comments are welcome on my talk page!
  35. scope_creep I'm a software engineer, practical side. At the moment, working on German WW2 stuff, Enigma, who made it, tested, personnel, military units. All missing, but WP needs balance. Scope creep (talk) 10:57, 9 September 2016 (UTC)[reply]
  36. KingAntenor I specialize in P versus NP problem and others
  37. Paulo Barreto - post-quantum cryptosystems (lattices, codes, isogenies, hash-based signatures), elliptic curves and bilinear pairings, cryptographic sponges, hash functions, blocks ciphers and their modes of operation.
  38. User:Bluedeck - Private key cryptanalysis. Social engineering.
  39. User:Stewart Little - I'm interested in private encryption/cryptography especially on Linux-based systems.
  40. User:Robwahl - Cyber security, math, computer programming, etc..,
  41. User:MarkZusab
  42. User:Nicerobot 17:08, 3 August 2020 (UTC)[reply]
  43. User:Duckmather - anything mathematical or copy-editing is good for me
  44. User:A40585 - Interested in applied crypto, but also some theoretical topics,

Inactive members

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  1. Matt Crypto (talk · contribs) — block ciphers anything I'm not too dim to understand, but particularly World War II-era crypto.
  2. Arvindn - theory of cryptography
  3. Imran
  4. Dante Alighieri | Talk - drafted after dozens of edits related to restructuring of Enigma page.
  5. Jon
  6. AntS
  7. Decrypt3 - it's why I chose the username.
  8. Peter Hendrickson
  9. CryptoDerk - number theory, galois fields, discrete log, elliptic curves
  10. Cryptosmith - crypto engineering, network protocols
  11. Clement Seveillac - general crypto, crypto software, PKI, smart cards
  12. ciphergoth
  13. Schnolle - PKI related.
  14. Chris Peikert - theoretical crypto (zero-knowledge, multiparty computation, etc.), intersection of coding theory and crypto
  15. ral315 -- I'm an amateur mathematician, freshman in college, and creator of the Math WikiPortal. Check it out sometime!
  16. Ram Moskovitz PKI, software distribution security, DRM, CA Operations
  17. Julian Krause Computer Science Major, interested in all types of cryptography and math.
  18. Levi CS also, computer security-related, can also make images and diagrams.
  19. E=MC^2 Nothing really in particular
  20. I Stanton anything, particularly math related.
  21. Dachshund - elliptic curves, applied crypto
  22. jonelo - security, one way hash algorithms
  23. Nahaj - Implementation issues, Validation issues (Author of the first open source government validated (US, Canada) SHA-1 implmentation, 2000 (two months ago a second such validation appeared, OpenSSL))
  24. Sir Ruptor (Talk)block ciphers, stream ciphers, hash functions cryptanalysis, stream cipher components (LFSR, NLFSR, NLPFSR, etc.), secure key exchange protocols, reverse engineering related topics
  25. David Göthberg - I used to work with and teach crypto in embedded systems. That is, how to use crypto in cars and other machinery. Back in the 90's I was part of a team that designed a "trusted computing system" for the cars of a big car manufacturer. So far I have mostly written hash related articles and made hash related diagrams. I am mostly interested in crypto from a programmer and protocol point of view and I like to make diagrams. I am not a math guy or cryptanalyst.
  26. Meekohi
  27. Batman900 - Diffie-Hellman problem, Crowds, Degree of anonymity; I am an undergraduate and am studying security at UVA, I am interested in anonymity/cryptography/number theory.
  28. Quarl (talk)
  29. Mangojuice (Talk) — theoretical aspects, multiple areas.
  30. MagusMind - theoretical crypto
  31. William Allen Simpson — practical applications
  32. detach - Applying symmetric ciphers in programs, different modes of operation, used blowfish (CBC) and XTEA, would want to put more effort in research other area's
  33. Dr1819 - Random number generation, public/private key cryptography
  34. Silmarillion
  35. Thehumph - general cryptography
  36. the editor1(my page)
  37. Kaine I - dreamer of cryptography, general cryptography/cryptoanalysis
  38. Msoos - My field is computer security + cryptography. I am willing to proofread and correct articles.
  39. Raymondofrish - I'm working on a thesis on some large integer factorization methods.
  40. Stevebkk - historical ciphers
  41. Wintermute314Digital signature, Time stamp
  42. jim -crypto v/v
  43. David4286 - I like all kinds of things, I'm particularly interested in various forms of cryptanalysis.
  44. S2z - Interests include number theory, information theory and cryptanalysis.
  45. Shoseido - Digital Signature.
  46. Autarch - classical and modern cryptanalysis. I started entries on Military Cryptanalytics and Lambros D. Callimahos.
  47. Maxt — Theoretical and applied cryptography, cryptology, partially cryptanalysis, cryptographic software.
  48. Dylan Lake
  49. sandmouse I'm fascinated with all types of ciphers...
  50. FactsOnly - Fun Stuff
  51. Randfan!! 16:54, 18 November 2006 (UTC) -I like this stuff, but am not really good at this stuff.[reply]
  52. RashBold (talk · contribs) - general interest in ciphers, especially 20th century.
  53. Vapor One - General interest in covert communication.
  54. Limn - Just about all things cryptography-related.
  55. Sean
  56. Lighthead þ - Interested in all kinds of coding, especially codes that are beneath our awareness in terms of psychology.
  57. Samrsharma - All kinds of cryptography.
  58. Blokhead - theoretical foundations based on computational complexity: formal definitions, computational hardness assumptions, protocols with provable security
  59. ParanoidMike - EFS, RMS, BitLocker, Windows PKI, cryptographic risks and mitigations
  60. xDanielx - Algorithm comparison & analysis, etc.
  61. Ronyz - Modern Cryptography.
  62. Counterforensics - do cryptologic research for a living.
  63. Ian Harvey - design commercial Hardware Security Modules for a living.
  64. Ivan Akira (talk) - I like encryption algorithm and want to help in this project.
  65. Protonk (talk) General Interest. No vocational experience.
  66. Decateron - Interested in number theory, logic, and computability. Both historical and contemporary cryptography.
  67. NoDepositNoReturn - general cryptography theory and practice, modern cryptography, traffic analysis and anonymity.
  68. Howard Vigorita - Algorithm analysis and optimization
  69. -- TinuCherian (Wanna Talk?) - 06:45, 27 June 2008 (UTC) Crypography related to computers and computing[reply]
  70. KSinitski - financial transactions cryptography, cryptographic key management.
  71. Thedjatclubrock - Interested in Cryptography.
  72. Noah Salzman — General interest in cryptography and security
  73. DocDeel516 - Mathematics, theoretical physics, anything of the such. Cryptography historian.
  74. Gavia immer modern cryptography, security proofs, and real-world implementations
  75. Kcrao Software developer working on 802.11 drivers and protocol implementations. I have worked on several 802.11 related security protocols and supplicants. My interests include PKI, various EAP methods, SSL/TLS, 802.11i, etc.
  76. CryptoTech VHDL and C implementations of crytographic algorithms, Secure communication protocols, Cryptanalysis of communication systems
  77. Chrismiceli Authentication, signatures, anti-computer forensics
  78. Jarhed Business application of cryptography, especially PKI and SSL
  79. Kumar A little bit on Lattice Based Cryptography, its history and history of other cryptographic schemes in general.
  80. Vishay Vanjani IPSEC,SSL,SSH
  81. BigK HeX (talk · contribs)
  82. Htonl (talk · contribs) - hash functions, maybe a little lattice-based stuff and ECC
  83. charlesreid1 Computational aspects of cryptography, practical cryptography (computer networks, file encryption, etc.), number theory
  84. Guymacon Researcher in the area of low cost, low energy use, high computational power custom hardware suitable for massively parallel brute force attacks.
  85. Hawk777 I'm a computer science student working in systems and security; my area of expertise is modern cryptography in the area of protocols (not so much primitives).
  86. OKelly

Cryptography in other Wikimedia projects

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Free content

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Other Internet content

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Other cryptography encyclopedias

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  • David E. Newton's Encyclopedia of Cryptology (ISBN 0874367727), 1998, has over 550 articles with an overall slant on the history of cryptography, but plenty of modern topics included as well.
  • The Encyclopedia of Cryptography and Security 684 pages, (Aug 10, 2005), Springer (ISBN 038723473X) [1], [2] has some notable cryptographers contributing (e.g. Eli Biham writing Differential cryptanalysis, Joan Daemen and Vincent Rijmen writing Rijndael). 460 articles with a technical summary / academic focus. 2500 references cited.
  • Microsoft® Encyclopedia of Security, 800 pages (May 14, 2003), Microsoft Press International, ISBN 0735618771. (Table of contents)[dead link]. While covering the entire field of security, it has entries on a number of crypto topics.

Templates

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Article talk page

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We might wish to tag the Talk: pages of articles which are directly about cryptography with a notice about this WikiProject. For this purpose, there is {{WikiProject Cryptography}}, which expands to the following:

WikiProject iconCryptography: Computer science Unassessed
WikiProject iconThis article is within the scope of WikiProject Cryptography, a collaborative effort to improve the coverage of Cryptography on Wikipedia. If you would like to participate, please visit the project page, where you can join the discussion and see a list of open tasks.
???This article has not yet received a rating on Wikipedia's content assessment scale.
???This article has not yet received a rating on the importance scale.
Taskforce icon
This article is supported by WikiProject Computer science.
Discussion at: Template talk:Infobox block cipher.

Currently trialling Template:Infobox block cipher on AES, Blowfish, DEAL, DES, FEAL, GOST, IDEA, LOKI97, MISTY1, RC2, RC5, Serpent, Square, TEA, Triple DES, Twofish, XTEA

(Would) Need to apply to: 3-Way, Camellia, CAST-128, CAST-256, CMEA, DES-X, GDES, Iraqi block cipher, KASUMI, Khafre, KHAZAD, Khufu, LOKI89/91, Lucifer, MAGENTA, MARS, MMB, NewDES, Red Pike, S-1, SAFER, SHARK, Skipjack, RC6.

Instead of {{stub}}, you might want to use {{crypto-stub}}. One advantage is that Category:Cryptography stubs gives a list of all the cryptography-related stubs. The message is:

If you add this userbox to your userpage you get automatically included in the Category:WikiProject Cryptography participants. It produces:


An award placed at another users talk page for improving Cryptography-related articles.
{{subst:The Cryptography Barnstar|1=message ~~~~|2=alt}}

The Cryptography Barnstar
message ~~~~

 

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Cryptography has some navigational elements to make it easier for a reader to find related topics.

The main crypto navigation box

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It produces:

This template is the main crypto navigation box. It can be added to the bottom of any cryptography article. This template also has some magic so it can include one or more of the specialised crypto navigation boxes inside the same frame.

To only use this template alone add this code to the bottom of an article:

{{crypto navbox}}

If you want it to also show for instance the specialised navigation box about stream ciphers then give it the "stream" parameter, like this:

{{crypto navbox | stream}}

You can also add several boxes in it, like this:

{{crypto navbox | block | stream}}

Note that the parameters come sort of in backwards order. In the example above the stream cipher box will be on top, followed by the block cipher box and then with the main crypto "navbox" at the bottom.

Here is an invalid example since "navbox" should not be a parameter but instead is part of the address of this template:

{{crypto stream | navbox}}

The available specialised boxes are:

block, stream, public-key, hash, machines, classical

For more details about these navigation boxes please see the description on the page of the main crypto navigation box itself. Below are examples of usage with the specialised boxes.


{{Crypto navbox | block | stream}}

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It produces:


{{Crypto navbox | block}}

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It produces:


{{Crypto navbox | stream}}

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It produces:


{{Crypto navbox | public-key}}

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It produces:


{{Crypto navbox | hash}}

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It produces:


{{Crypto navbox | machines}}

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It produces:


{{Crypto navbox | classical}}

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It produces: