- Source: Digital Signature Standard
The Digital Signature Standard (DSS) is a Federal Information Processing Standard specifying a suite of algorithms that can be used to generate digital signatures established by the U.S. National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) in 1994. Five revisions to the initial specification have been released: FIPS 186-1 in 1998, FIPS 186-2 in 2000, FIPS 186-3 in 2009, FIPS 186-4 in 2013, and FIPS 186-5 in 2023.
It defines the Digital Signature Algorithm, contains a definition of RSA signatures based on the definitions contained within PKCS #1 version 2.1 and in American National Standard X9.31 with some additional requirements, and contains a definition of the Elliptic Curve Digital Signature Algorithm based on the definition provided by American National Standard X9.62 with some additional requirements and some recommended elliptic curves. It also approves the use of all three algorithms.
References
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Liam Payne
- Zayn Malik
- FL Studio
- Cardi B
- Hyundai Ioniq 5
- Condé Nast
- Krisis Perbankan Amerika Serikat 2023
- Billie Eilish
- Vachirawit Chivaaree
- Hyundai Staria
- Digital Signature Standard
- Digital Signature Algorithm
- Elliptic Curve Digital Signature Algorithm
- Digital signature
- Electronic signature
- Qualified digital certificate
- Diffie–Hellman key exchange
- BLS digital signature
- Lattice-based cryptography
- Hash-based cryptography