Sneaking Backdoors into the Rulebooks | Major Influences of Spy Agencies on Encryption (Part 2)
The cybersecurity field relies heavily on standards, primarily published by NIST, to ensure accountability. This article explores how spy agencies have historically impacted encryption standards since the late 1990s.
🔥 Related Trending Topics
LIVE TRENDSThis video may be related to current global trending topics. Click any trend to explore more videos about what's hot right now!
THIS VIDEO IS TRENDING!
This video is currently trending in Bangladesh under the topic 's'.
About this video
The cyber security field thrives on standards. It’s how we hold each other accountable. A lot of those standards are published by NIST. In the late 90s, development for one proposal, dual_ec_drbg, was taken over by the NSA. Suspicious changes were made. These changes were called out by experts in the field. They couldn’t prove anything nefarious, but still pointed to magic numbers in the proposal and raised their concerns. For some reason it didn’t matter and the proposal, backdoor and all, became an official published NIST standard. RSA security, a huge company that still exists, quickly adopted the standard and began spreading the backdoor across the world. Honest mistake right? lol. Lmao even.
Reporting by reuters and leaks by Edward Snowden confirmed the suspicions
Sources:
https://blog.cloudflare.com/how-the-nsa-may-have-put-a-backdoor-in-rsas-cryptography-a-techni
cal-primer/
https://www.schneier.com/blog/archives/2007/11/the_strange_sto.html
https://www.reuters.com/article/us-usa-security-rsa-idUSBRE9BJ1C220131220/
Music by CreatorMix.com
#cybersecurity #encryption #nsa #hacking #backdoor
Video Information
Views
925
Total views since publication
Likes
29
User likes and reactions
Duration
1:39
Video length
Published
Oct 24, 2025
Release date
Quality
hd
Video definition