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by lmm
2870 days ago
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> If you're getting bi-directional communication with your partner, you're getting key cycling. The server can only delay key cycling in a session by delaying one direction of communication. That implies the client has to have a code path for sending multiple messages without cycling. And it forces a tough choice between losing messages that are received out of order and not destroying keys quite as quickly as nominally expected. Maybe it's fine, but for me it pushed the complexity threshold over the point where I could feel any confidence in it. I'm comfortable with traditional PKI. I'm comfortable with the online-only OTR/axolotl ratchet. But I'm very dubious of having this many edge cases. > The server could exclusively hand out the last resort pre-key to all users attempting to contact you, and refuse to accept new pre-keys. Then the first flight of messages from users establishing a new session would not be PFS, but any messages sent once you respond would have PFS. Assuming there's no way for the client to end up on the initial-message codepath. Again, yeah, maybe it's fine. But it all just feels so hacky and fiddly. These edge cases aren't where anyone studying the protocol is going to spend any time, but it's security-critical that they be implemented right. |
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If you have a successful compromise of one message, a missed message is all it takes for the ratchet to self-heal and you have lost the ability to decrypt future messages. It is PFS+ in a sense.