Perhaps you would care to enlighten us ignorant plebs rather than taunting us?
My understanding (obviously as a non expert) matches what cyberax wrote above. Is it not common wisdom that the pursuit of new and exciting crypto is an exercise filled with landmines? By that logic rushing to switch to the new shiny would appear to be extremely unwise.
I appreciate the points made in the article that the PQ algorithms aren't as new as they once were and that if you accept this new imminent deadline then ironing out the specification details for hybrid schemes might present the bigger downside between the two options.
I mean TBH I don't really get it. It seems like we (as a society or species or whatever) ought to be able to trivially toss a standard out the door that's just two other standards glued together. Do we really need a combinatoric explosion here? Shouldn't 1 (or maybe 2) concrete algorithm pairings be enough? But if the evidence at this point is to the contrary of our ability to do that then I get it. Sometimes our systems just aren't all that functional and we have to make the best of it.
"taunt" in the sense that you dangle some knowledge in front of people and make them beg, not "taunt" in the sense of "insult".
You said:
>"[...] don't even get what the real argument is."
and then refuse to explain what the "real" argument is. someone then asks for clarification and you say:
"It's definitely not [...]""
okay, cool! you are still refusing to explain what the "real" argument is. but at least we know one thing it isnt, i guess.
you haven't even addressed the "mistaken assertion". you just say "nah" and refuse to elaborate. which is fine, i guess. but holy moly is it ever frustrating to read some of your comment chains. it often appears that your sole goal in commenting is to try and dunk on people -- at least that is how many of your comments come across to me.
I was explicit about what the real argument isn't: the notion that lattice cryptography is under-studied compared to RSA/ECC.
I understand what your takeaway from this thread is, but my perspective is that the thread is a mix of people who actually work in this field and people who don't, both sides with equally strong opinions but not equally strong premises. The person I replied to literally followed up by saying they don't follow the space! Would you have assumed that from their preceding comment?
(Not to pick on them; acknowledging that limitation on their perspective was a stand-up move, and I appreciate it.)
You do "XYZ isn't the right argument, ABC is" on a thread like that, and the reply tends to be "well yeah that's what I meant, ABC is just a special case of XYZ". No thanks.
I'm not a professional cryptographer, but I _am_ really interested in opinions of experts in the field and I do have a lot of prior experience with crypto (the actual kind, not *coin). From my point of view, I just don't see what's the fuss is all about.
There's no shared understanding, just a snarky expert claiming (in effect) "I know better than all you simpletons but I'm not going to share". At best it's incredibly poor behavior. At worst it's the behavior of someone who doesn't actually have a defensible point to make.
My understanding (obviously as a non expert) matches what cyberax wrote above. Is it not common wisdom that the pursuit of new and exciting crypto is an exercise filled with landmines? By that logic rushing to switch to the new shiny would appear to be extremely unwise.
I appreciate the points made in the article that the PQ algorithms aren't as new as they once were and that if you accept this new imminent deadline then ironing out the specification details for hybrid schemes might present the bigger downside between the two options.
I mean TBH I don't really get it. It seems like we (as a society or species or whatever) ought to be able to trivially toss a standard out the door that's just two other standards glued together. Do we really need a combinatoric explosion here? Shouldn't 1 (or maybe 2) concrete algorithm pairings be enough? But if the evidence at this point is to the contrary of our ability to do that then I get it. Sometimes our systems just aren't all that functional and we have to make the best of it.