https://arstechnica.com/information-technology/2022/03/researcher-uses-600-year-old-algorithm-to-crack-crypto-keys-found-in-the-wild/

"Cryptographic keys generated with older software now owned by technology 
company Rambus are weak enough to be broken instantly using commodity hardware, 
a researcher reported on Monday. This revelation is part of an investigation 
that also uncovered a handful of weak keys in the wild."

"The software comes from a basic version of the SafeZone Crypto Libraries, 
which were developed by a company called Inside Secure and acquired by Rambus 
as part of its 2019 acquisition of Verimatrix, a Rambus representative said. 
That version was deprecated prior to the acquisition and is distinct from a 
FIPS-certified version that the company now sells under the Rambus FIPS 
Security Toolkit brand."

Mind your Ps and Qs

"Researcher Hanno Böck said that the vulnerable SafeZone library doesn't 
sufficiently randomize the two prime numbers it used to generate RSA keys. 
(These keys can be used to secure Web traffic, shells, and other online 
connections.) Instead, after the SafeZone tool selects one prime number, it 
chooses a prime in close proximity as the second one needed to form the key."

"The problem is that both primes are too similar," Böck said in an interview. 
"So the difference between the two primes is really small." The SafeZone 
vulnerability is tracked as CVE-2022-26320."

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