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Null encryption

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

In modern cryptography, null encryption (or selecting null cipher or NONE cipher) is choosing not to use encryption in a system where various encryption options are offered. When this option is used, the text is the same before and after encryption, which can be practical for testing/debugging, or authentication-only communication. In mathematics such a function is known as the identity function.

Examples of this are the "eNULL" and "aNULL" cipher suite in OpenSSL,[1] and the "NULL Encryption Algorithm" in IPSec.[2]

See also

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  • RFC 2410: "The NULL Encryption Algorithm and Its Use With IPsec"

References

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  1. ^ "ciphers - SSL cipher display and cipher list tool". OpenSSL. Retrieved 2014-12-10.
  2. ^ RFC 2410 - The NULL Encryption Algorithm and Its Use With IPsec