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I know that RSACryptoServiceProvider can encrypt with the public key, then it can be decrypted with the private key.

Is it possible to encrypt with the private key and decrypt with the public key using the RSACryptoServiceProvider ?

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    "Encrypt with the private key" is not a valid cryptographic operation. If you are trying to perform that operation, usually you want a Signature Scheme with Recovery.
    – jww
    Feb 25, 2017 at 7:23

9 Answers 9

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Just to clear things up a bit:

RSA can be used either for encryption (ensuring that Eve cannot read messages that Alice sends to Bob) or for signing (ensuring that if Alice sends a message to Bob, Bob knows that it was actually Alice that sent the message, and not Eve pretending to be Alice)

RSA generates a pair of keys - a public key and a private key. RSA is designed so that if you apply the public key and then apply the private key, or vice versa, you will get the same message back. And the public key can be derived from the private key, but the opposite is impossible.

To use RSA for encryption, Alice encrypts the message using Bob's public key. The only way to read this message is with Bob's private key, which only he has. Thus Eve can't read the message because he does not have this key. On the other hand, this provides no authentication of the source of the message. Eve can also get Bob's public key (since it's public) and send messages to Bob, pretending to be Alice.

To use RSA for signing, Alice takes a hash of the message, encrypts the hash using her own private key, and appends the result (this is the signature) to the message. Eve can of course still decrypt this using Alice's public key. However, Bob can decrypt the signature using Alice's public key and see if it matches. If it does, it must have been encrypted using Alice's private key, which only she has, so it must have come from Alice.


Now, I'm not familiar with the .NET cryptography API, so I'm not sure if it works exactly as described here. But this explanation might help you understand some of the answers you are getting.

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  • What do you mean by "apply the public key and then apply the private key, or vice versa"? What does "apply" mean here?
    – WarLord
    Oct 3, 2017 at 12:05
  • What would happen if Alice encrypted the message itself instead of the hash? Wouldn't that be simpler, or is there a security flaw in this? I'm talking about signing of course, not encryption. Nov 17, 2017 at 19:50
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    Nitpick -- RSA does not guarantee that the public key cannot be derived from the private key. In fact, this is often trivial to do. See this answer.
    – GregRos
    Mar 19, 2018 at 13:04
  • @MaciejKrawczyk alice signs with her private key. if she signed the message instead of the hash of the message then Eve would be able to decrypt the signature with the public key and thus obtain the message Jun 21, 2019 at 14:06
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EDIT: I should preface this answer by saying that the specific .NET RSACyrptoServiceProvider likely will not support this, due the cargo cult "knowledge" that this is impossible or the more pragmatic knowledge that this is rarely useful to do in practice.

ORIGINAL:

Everyone claiming that there is no such thing either doesn't know how RSA works, or they are stuck in the "signing" rut.

It is entirely possible, and makes complete sense, to encrypt with the private key. Yes, this is similar to signing, but this is NOT at all what most modern libraries take as signing. To them, this means computing a message digest, or HMAC, and encrypting with the private key. Likening encryption with the private key to signing makes just as much sense as saying that sticking a document in a safe, and leaving the key lying around, is a stand-in for signing the document.

Yes, it IS encrypting, because its the same operation. The private-key encrypted ciphertext is just as illegible as the public-key encrypted ciphertext; one needs both keys to decrypt the ciphertext.

See http://fringe.davesource.com/Fringe/Crypt/RSA/Algorithm.html for reference on the RSA algorithm.

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    I find this answer is amusing... I'm not sure I would disagree with an academic body of cryptographers and mathematicians.
    – jww
    Feb 25, 2017 at 5:13
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    “Yes, it IS encrypting, because its the same operation” No, it is NOT encrypting, because it is not the same operation. The modular exponentiation is the same, but the padding part is different. No common library offers encryption with a private key. I think you're doing what you're accusing others of, which is confusing signature with encryption. Mar 19, 2019 at 1:35
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    "Encrypt with the private key" is not a valid cryptographic operation. One encrypts with a public key, and decrypts with a private key. Go back to the [uncited] paper and read the definitions again. A signature will be described similar to "treat the message as an instance of cipher text and perform the decryption operation [with the private key]". When folks want to "encrypt with the private key" they often mean "signature scheme with recovery".
    – jww
    May 23, 2019 at 10:50
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    @blowdart got the answer spot-on, but the crowd at Stack Overflow is no wiser. They rejected the correct answer that was handed to them on a silver platter... That's what happens on developers 2developer answer sites like Stack Overflow.
    – jww
    May 23, 2019 at 10:54
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    You might want to read Bernstein's RSA signatures and Rabin–Williams signatures:the state of the art. It is very approachable, and provides background information and history of RSA, including attacks and counter measures.
    – jww
    May 23, 2019 at 11:01
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Performing the raw RSA operation with the private key is usually called the decryption operation (just as performing it with the public key is called the encryption operation).

It is useful to have access to this operation - for example to implement an operation that is not supported by the framework.

The operation exists: it is the DecryptValue-method, which is defined by RSACryptoServiceProvider's base-class: System.Security.Cryptography.RSA. Unfortunately, it is not supported by RSACryptoServiceProvider (since the underlying win32-api, CryptoAPI, does not support it). If you could get hold of another .NET-implementation of the RSA-class, you would be able to do it, however.

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No. That's not how any public/private key encryption works. You can only encrypt with the public key, and only decrypt with the private key.

If you want to apply the private key to a message, maybe you're looking for a signature, rather than encryption? This is a different cryptographic scheme that can also use RSA keys.

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    Thanks!I want to do Serial Number for protect my software,if RSA can't encrypt with private key,How to do by other way?
    – guaike
    Jul 25, 2009 at 7:16
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    Actually, encrypting with a private key can have it's uses. You can encrypt and release something, and the "public" can decrypt the message with your public key, therefore knowing that the encrypted file came from you. It works as a rudimentary form of a signature/authentication. The old dos-based PGP allowed this.
    – CraigTP
    Jul 25, 2009 at 8:05
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    Craig you're talking about signing, which is an entirely different thing. Signing isn't encryption (although it is cryptography). Even then the signature can only be generated with the private key, but checked with the public one.
    – blowdart
    Jul 25, 2009 at 8:15
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    To clear things up, if you're using RSA, mathematically, yes you can encrypt with your private key, which can only be decrypted by the public key. However, workflow-wise, it usually doesn't really make much sense to do so (except in the specific use case as part of creating a digital signature).
    – Lie Ryan
    Jun 17, 2015 at 13:45
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    @davidhood2 No, this answer is correct. It's of course possible to apply the RSA exponentiation with the private key, but then what you're doing is not encryption. May 23, 2019 at 13:26
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Fortunately no. You can however sign with the private key and verify the signature with the public key.

While the math involve makes sense when the key roles are reversed (and this is how signatures work), encrypting for privacy doesn't make much sense when the decryption key is well know and public.

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  • Well when the math is reversed the inverse function would take a much longer time to finish, an unfeasibly long time. Jul 25, 2009 at 7:23
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    by 'reverse the math' I mean the math doesn't care if e and d in the algorithm are swapped. This is what signing does: encrypt the message hash digest with the private key (the private exponent 'd'). Obviously I did not mean the computation direction can be reversed. Jul 25, 2009 at 17:06
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You can do both; encrypt with private and decypt with public, OR, encrypt with public and decrypt with private. You can not encrypt then decrypt with private key only, nor can you do the same with public keys alone.

Remus nailed it; encrypting with the private key doesn't make much sense when the decryption key is well know and public.

Also, you can derive the public key from the private key, but not vice versa.

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  • I find this answer is amusing, too... I'm not sure I would disagree with an academic body of cryptographers and mathematicians.
    – jww
    Feb 25, 2017 at 5:14
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    Yes, even I am wondering the point of encrypting with the private key, when the public key is supposed to be known. Unless, its like , that the public key (even though) named 'public; is not really made public to all, but only to the concerned party. Jul 24, 2017 at 7:22
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This is what I understand RSA signature.

pseudo code:

First Alice made a signature:

alice_signature = encrypt(alice_message, alice_private_key)

Then Bob Eve... (anyone who having alice_public_key) verify the signature:

decrypted_message = decrypt(alice_signature, alice_public_key)

To confirm:

if(received_message_from_alice == decrypted_message)
  the signature proved the message is from alice
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You can both encrypt and decrypt with PrivateKey. PrivateKey infact contains both Private and PublicKey.

Theoretically at least you can encrypt with PublicKey and decrypt with PrivateKey and vice-versa. In VB.net I see the first case works and secondcase throws BadKey error

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    I have to encrypt with PrivateKey and decrypt with PublicKey. After one day of failed attempts I understood that RSACryptoServiceProvider.Encrypt always uses PublicKey even when RSACryptoServiceProvider object is created from PrivateKey. On the other hand I cannot use Sign because it requires hash algorithm but I want to encrypt data w/o hash. In other words, the problem is in .Net implementation.
    – i486
    Jun 30, 2015 at 9:52
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The security of public key cryptosystems rests on the fact that the sign()/encrypt() function is a one-way function in that it would take an infeasible amount of time to decrypt it without the public key "trap-door".

Also, usually the generated keys are not the same length, although they could be. There is a lot of papers about asymmetric key length with RSA.

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