Text description - RSA encryption video
VISION: John Mack plays with coding machine; WW2 ftg
NARRATOR: We use it everyday and we certainly rely on it.
Although cryptography began thousands of years ago, mathematical analysis of encrypted communications has effectively altered the course of history.
VISION: WW2 footage; John Mack, Maths/stats, Sydney Uni
John Mack V/O: The most important Japanese code in WWII was used by the Japanese navy.
and the breaking of that code turned out to be the most significant source of intelligence information available to the allied forces..
VISION: WW2 ftg
John Mack: Japanese navy made several fundamental blunders in the development of the code.
VISION: John Mack; Battle of Midway ftg
John Mack SYNC : Instead of having a 100,000 possible code book entries the maximum numbers you can have was 33,334 cause that’s the number of multiples of three with five digits. That turned out to be an absolutely critical blunder because it enabled the codes to be broken steadily in time for the famous Battle of Midway in the middle of 1942, so the American navy knew exactly what the Japanese battle plan would be.
VISION: Battle of Midway ftg
Suddenly the trap is sprung. The invasion forces were hit, and hit, and hit again
VISION: Enigma machine; Bletchley Park; Alan Turing
NARRATOR: in WWII the Germans needed a mechanism to automate cryptography. The invention of the Enigma, an electromechanical rotor machine, made it easy for operators to just type in a a daily key to encrypt their message which the other end could then de-crypt. The clever mathematicians at Bletchley Park in the UK, including Alan Turing , the father of computers, managed to break the Enigma.
VISION: Michael Smith, DSTO; images from DSTO brochure
Michael Smith SYNC: I'm head of the Crypomathematics Research Discipline in the Defence Science and Technology Organisation DSTO and our role is to support defence research into cryptography and crypt analysis to support defence future security and Australian national security
VISION: DoD ftg army in field communicating
Michael Smith V/O: Defence to do its role needs to ensure that they can communicate effectively (yeah cheers thanks) and securely (comms on in vicinity..over), troops overseas on dangerous operations need to be able to communicate to their base. And so all of those links are need to be real time and secure otherwise peoples lives are jeopardised (Tango 4 2 5 2..)
VISION: John Mack; Rivest, Shamir and Adelman image
John Mack SYNC: What came out after WWII which revolutionised cryptography was a system called RSA, the initials of the three people who developed it.
VISION: Michael Smith, DSTO
Michael Smith V/O: Traditionally you had symmetrical encryption, you had to have the same key, the breakthrough really was in coming up with this idea of an asymmetric algorithm where you needed two different keys one of which you could make public the other one so long as you kept it secret you could be assured that the communications people were sending you were secure.
VISION: Michael Smith; FTG ..army in field, communicating
Michael Smith SYNC: It's quite easy to multiply 2 numbers together, it is a much harder problem to look at a huge number and ask what two numbers were multiplied together to form that number
VISION: Michael Smith
Michael Smith SYNC: So to make the RSA problem as hard as possible you create these two secret prime numbers you multiply them together you get a very big composite number which means it can be broken up as product and you're the only one that knows how to do that
VISION: Fermat image
NARRATOR: Pierre de Fermat proved his little theorem in 1640. It is an important component in proving that RSA cryptography works.
VISION:Raymond Wallace SYNC
I'm a principal security consultant in the information security group at Westpac.
VISION: ATM seq
Raymond Wallace: Cryptography and banking is very important in today’s society. It gives us the ability for us to trust the customer, to manage risk, to reduce fraud.
VISION: CU chip
Raymond Wallace : If you look at a modern credit card you’ll see a little gold chip on the card, on that chip is special circuitry that enables information to be encrypted and decrypted in a very safe way.
VISION: online banking , padlock
Raymond Wallace: The beauty of modern cryptography is that it is invisible an example of that would be using internet banking, the customer’s browser and our internet banking server talk to one another. All communications between the browser and the server are encrypted.
VISION: Raymond Wallace; RTA TOKEN
For certain customers of Westpac that transact in very large amounts of money, we augment the internet password with an additional layer of security we use an RSA token device that we give to the customer, you’ll see 6 numbers displayed on the front of that token. The number is derived from the time of day and also a secret encryption key that’s unique to every token. Those 6 numbers change every 60 seconds and that number can only be used once by the customer to log on or authenticate with our server.
VISION: ATM – cash out
Without that mathematics the cryptography would not be possible and without that cryptography modern banking would not be possible.
VISION: Julian Fay
SYNC: Our business is the application of cryptography to solve real world problems on high speed optical communication systems.
VISION: Julian Fay walks around his company talks to staff
Julian Fay: So our customers tend be people who care deeply about the security of their information. That includes military and defence type organisations, all branches of government the financial sector, in the industrial sector, in the mining infrastructure
VISION: Julian Fay walks around his company talks to staff
Julian Fay: And we have to use symmetric rather than asymmetric encryption algorithms because they're much faster. we have to transfer securely the encryption key from the sender to the receiver across the network and to do that we do use a symmetric RSA encryption in our products. We use AES 256 bit symmetric encryption to encrypt the data keys and we use RSA encryption with the key size of 20/48 bit to securely exchange those data encrypting keys across the network
VISION:Julian Fay walks around his company talks to staff
Julian Fay: The challenges aren’t going away. Networks are getting faster, the bad guys are getting cleverer, it's really a constant war between the code makers and the code breakers so we need the best and brightest minds to help us with that problem in the future.