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The myth of generic DPA. . . and the magic of learning

This paper was not found in any repository; the policy of its publisher is unknown or unclear.
This paper was not found in any repository; the policy of its publisher is unknown or unclear.

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Abstract

A generic DPA strategy is one which is able to recover secret information from physically observable device leakage without any a priori knowledge about the device's leakage characteristics. Here we provide much-needed clarification on results emerging from the existing literature, demonstrating precisely that such methods (strictly defined) are inherently restricted to a very limited selection of target functions. Continuing to search related techniques for a 'silver bullet' generic attack appears a bootless errand. However, we fnd that a minor relaxation of the strict definition - the incorporation of some minimal non-device specific intuition - produces scope for generic-emulating strategies, able to succeed against a far wider range of targets. We present stepwise regression as an example of such, and demonstrate its effectiveness in a variety of scenarios. We also give some evidence that its practical performance matches that of 'best bit' DoM attacks which we take as further indication for the necessity of performing profiled attacks in the context of device evaluations.