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Hi,

Which cryptography algorithm is the most secure that ships with .net?

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3 Answers

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You cannot directly compare all types of cryptographic algorithms. That would be like comparing a sorting algorithm with a multiplication algorithm: they have different purposes. That being said, I would answer:

  • Symmetric cipher: AES-256
  • Asymmetric cipher: RSA with 4096 bit key (I believe that is the maximum in .NET) or ECDSA with 571 bit key (but that is only supported in .NET 3.5)
  • Hash: SHA-512
  • Message Authentication Code: HMAC with SHA-512

That being said, those are overkill for most applications, and you should do fine using AES-128, RSA with 2048 bit key, SHA-256 and HMAC with SHA-256.

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Rasmus, what would be ideal for a licence key? – Mat Nov 3 '08 at 15:28
My answer here: stackoverflow.com/questions/258994/… – Rasmus Faber Nov 3 '08 at 18:12
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I'm somewhat partial to SHA-512. If 512 is a little excessive, the other members of the SHA-2 family might be helpful - SHA-256 and SHA-384 are both in the SHA-2 family. But AviewAnew's suggestion of AES 256 is good as well.

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the msdn examples don't seem to be using a key to generate the hash? – Mat Nov 3 '08 at 14:27
Because you don't use a key to generate the hash. A SHA hash will always be the same for a given input. – Thomas Owens Nov 3 '08 at 14:28
Since the tag is encryption, I think we wanted an encryption algorithm, rather than a Hash function. ASDF - A Hash function is unkeyed. A MAC (sometimes called a keyed hash function) uses a key and has a different purpose from SHA or AES. – Tom Ritter Nov 3 '08 at 14:29
That could be. Based on the question, though, SHA does fit the bill as a cryptographic hash function. – Thomas Owens Nov 3 '08 at 14:33
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As a direct answer: AES 256 Bit.

It's been beat on the most out of all the algorithms, and stands up well.

As a more involved answer: all the algorithms will work fine if you manage them well. Cyptography is more than the algorithm - it's about key storage, encryption mode, how you implement the call to the algorithm. It's akin to getting bullet proof walls on the outside of your house - but forgetting someone can fake your automatic garage door signal.

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