"Indeed, it seems that the phrase `National Security' is now the root password to the Constitution. And as with any dishonest superuser, the best user countermeasure is strong encryption." -- Phil Karn
Nautilus is a program that lets you have encrypted voice telephone conversations with your friends without needing any special equipment. All you need is an IBM-compatible PC capable of running DOS, a PC running Linux, or a Sun Sparcstation running SunOS or Solaris. It provides usable speech quality at bandwidths as low as 4800 bps, making it usable with cellular modems. Higher bandwidths provide either higher quality speech or reduce CPU requirements, depending on the selected speech coder.
Telephones are a much less secure medium than most people realize. It is relatively easy for anyone (not just law enforcement agencies) to eavesdrop on your phone conversations, without needing access to your phone wiring. By dialing into telephone switches using access codes stolen from dumpsters, "phone phreaks" can monitor your calls from across the country. Even the FBI has been wire-tapped using these methods. And government abuse of wiretaps against political opponents and others is well known. With cellular telephones, the situation is even worse. Anyone with a simple scanner or even a 1970's-vintage television set can eavesdrop on analog cellular conversations with no special skills or equipment. (This is because cellular phones operate on frequencies formerly occupied by UHF TV channels 69 to 83, and older TV sets can still pick up these frequencies). Newer digital cellular phones provide increased protection against interception by hackers, but they are still vulnerable to government wiretaps or those with access to the right equipment (such as some cellular telephone employees).
Anyone with a need for privacy in their phone calls should consider using Nautilus. Journalists talking with sources, lawyers talking to clients, businesspeople discussing company secrets, and couples wanting to talk about intimate matters all need privacy. You may need it too.
Nautilus is the first program of this type that we know of to be distributed for free with source code. A few similar programs have been distributed without source, so that their security cannot be independently examined. We have serious reservations against using any security program distributed without source, even if the author and distribution channel is trusted, because programs of this type need to be reviewed carefully by as many people as possible. Consider the famous Netscape security bug (now fixed) where the internal random number generator was seeded from the system clock and other sources with just a few total bits of entropy. This meant that crackers could read Netscape credit card transactions using only minutes of computing time. External review would catch bugs like this very quickly. Who knows how many other bugs of this type a program like Netscape might have?
Certain parts of the US Government appear to be working to ban civilian use of cryptography whose keys are not accessible to the government. Shortly after the notorious key-escrowed Clipper chip was first announced, the FBI testified before Congress that it was intended as a completely voluntary system. But the Electronic Privacy Information Center, using the Freedom of Information Act, recently obtained a briefing sent by FBI director William Sessions to the National Security Council, titled "Encryption: The Threat, Applications, and Potential Solutions". The briefing was prepared by the FBI, the NSA, and the Department of Justice, and said among other things:
Technical solutions, such as they are, will only work if they are incorporated into *all* encryption products. To ensure that this occurs, legislation mandating the use of Government-approved encryption products or adherence to Government encryption criteria is required.
Several other documents obtained at the same time reinforce the obvious implications of this passage. Unless there has been a total policy reversal at the upper levels of these security agencies since February 1993, we conclude that there is a continuing desire on their part to make programs like Nautilus illegal sometime in the future. We will have to stop further development and distribution if that happens.
We believe that the US Constitution entitles every citizen to use secure communications that only he or she controls the keys to (see the First and Fourth Amendments for more information). So we urge everybody to get a copy of Nautilus now and start using it. Although we have many enhancements planned for future versions that will make Nautilus better, the current version is already reliable and provides everything necessary to protect your privacy even if no further improvements are released.
For more info about the recently published FBI documents, see the Electronic Privacy Information Center's web page on the subject at http://www.epic.org/crypto/ban/fbi_dox/.
Nautilus uses your computer's audio hardware to digitize and play back your speech using one of several different speech compression algorithms built into the program. It encrypts the compressed speech using your choice of three different encryption functions, and transmits the encrypted packets over your modem to your friend's computer. At the other end, the process is reversed. The program is half-duplex but either user may hit a key to switch between talking and listening.
Nautilus's encryption key is generated in one of two ways. Earlier versions of Nautilus generated an encryption key from a shared secret passphrase that you and your friend would choose together ahead of time. Beginning with version 1.5, Nautilus generates the encryption key using the Diffie-Hellman key exchange algorithm by default, although users may still revert to the secret passphrase method if they prefer. Either way, once the key is agreed on, the rest of the conversation is encrypted with your choice of secret key cipher using the agreed-on key. Nautilus's three secret key ciphers are Triple DES, Blowfish, and IDEA. Blowfish is the default
Further details about Nautilus's cryptography can be found in the Cryptography appendix (Appendix B).
Nautilus currently runs on two hardware platforms: IBM PC-compatibles and desktop Sun Sparcstations (sun4c or sun4m architectures). For the IBM PC, you will need to run DOS, Linux, or possibly Solaris X86. For the Sparcstations, you will need SunOS or Solaris. In each case, you need a modem with 4800 bps or more of bandwidth, or a direct connection to the Internet with equivalent bandwidth. See below for info on specific systems.
For most uses of Nautilus, the Unix/Linux versions provide good security. But for highest security, you should use the DOS version of Nautilus, under vanilla MSDOS. Do not use a DOS emulator under Linux or a DOS box under Windows. This is because multitasking OS's such as Unix and Windows use a "swap file" on disk to store data from tasks not currently running and the OS's generally do not take special measures to zero out the swap file after the process finishes. If the session key for your conversation is stored in the swap file, an attacker with access to your machine may be able to recover it later. There is nothing that an application program like Nautilus can do about this without special help from the OS kernel which is not always available.
Nautilus runs on desktop Sun Sparcstations under SunOS and Solaris using the built-in audio hardware. If you are using a Sparcstation, you don't need to worry further about your hardware configuration (except the modem).
If you're using a PC, you need a 386 or faster processor (floating point is not required) and a Soundblaster-compatible audio board. Boards that provide Soundblaster emulation through software drivers rather than hardware compatibility will not work. In particular, no sound boards that attach to the computer via a PCMCIA slot or parallel port will work. This is because Nautilus uses the Soundblaster's DMA functions and those functions work only through the ISA bus.
The easiest way to find out if Nautilus can use particular sound card without trying it is to ask whether it supports all versions of the computer game DOOM. DOOM has the same audio hardware requirements as Nautilus, and is popular enough that vendors and dealers usually will know if a card they sell supports it. DOOM also has similar CPU requirements to Nautilus, so if your computer can run DOOM with all of its sound effects (not just music), it should be able to run Nautilus.
Nautilus's CPU requirements under Linux are similar to its requirements under MS-DOS, except that the current version requires floating point hardware (387, 486dx, etc.).
On the plus side, the Linux version of Nautilus uses Linux's /dev/dsp interface to control the sound board. This means it can use any sound board for which Linux has a driver. The Linux sound driver, called Unix Sound System (formerly known as VoxWare), currently supports at least the following sound cards: Soundblaster, Soundblaster 16, Pro Audio Spectrum 16, Gravis Ultrasound. See the USS Lite home page for more information on the Linux sound driver. The Linux Sound HOWTO document also has a section on sound cards supported by the sound driver under Linux.
A patch for the Linux kernel MAY allow Nautilus to prevent itself from being swapped out when it is run by the superuser. A copy of this patch is available from ftp://ftp.cc.gatech.edu/pub/linux/kernel/patches/misc/POSIX.4_locking.tar.gz. This patch has not been tested by us.
IP Socket |
7.2Kb/s+ |
2.4Kb/s |
D/H Key |
|
Solaris 2.x |
Y |
Y |
Y |
Y |
Linux 1.2 |
Y |
Y |
Y |
Y |
Windows 95 & NT |
P |
P |
P |
P |
MS Dos |
N |
Y |
Y |
Y |
Y | Support has been implemented and works | N | Support is not planned. |
P | Support is planned | F | Support is planned but not in progress. |
For the impatient, here is enough information about using Nautilus to let you start using it immediately.
You and your friend must agree on whether you will originate the call (dial out) or have your friend call you instead. The originator must know the answerer's telephone number, for a direct modem-to-modem connection, or their machine name or IP address for an Internet connection. The answerer should run the program first, so their computer is waiting for the originator's computer to establish the connection.
To originate a call, first make sure the person you are calling is ready to accept your call. He or she should have be running Nautilus in answer mode, so that Nautilus is displaying "Waiting for incoming Nautilus connection" on his or her screen.
Next, make sure your microphone is plugged into your computer and that it is turned on. Then, run the following command for a direct modem-to-modem connection under DOS:
C:\NAUTILUS> nautilus -o -p COM2 12025551212
Under Linux or Unix, you'd say
bash$ nautilus -o -p /dev/modem 12025551212
The "-o" option tells Nautilus to originate a call. The "-p" option tells Nautilus to use where to look for your modem. The last argument on the command line is the phone number you wish Nautilus to dial. Here is the Internet version of the command line (Linux/Unix only):
% nautilus -o -i archie.sura.net
Again, the "-o" option tells Nautilus to originate a call. The "-i" option tells Nautilus to use the Internet, rather than using a modem to dial the answerer's modem directly (you and the answerer can still be connected to the Internet via a modem, of course). The last argument on the command line is the name of the answerer's machine.
Nautilus will now print some startup messages.
It is important that your microphone be plugged in and turned on before you start up Nautilus, because Nautilus uses the audio energy coming into the microphone to initialize the random number generator with which it creates its session keys.
Nautilus does this sampling and initialization shortly after printing the startup messages. Nautilus prints a rough estimate of the entropy found in the sample, and warns you if it thinks the value is too low. If there is not enough entropy, Nautilus's security may be compromised. This might happen if your microphone input is turned off or shorted, or if there is not enough sound reaching the microphone to give Nautilus the entropy it needs. The amount of sound required depends on your microphone's sensitivity and also on your computer's ambient noise level when you run Nautilus.
If Nautilus prints such a warning message, you will have the opportunity to try again. Nautilus will record sound from the microphone for about 1/4 of second starting immediately after you press the return key, so blow into the microphone and continue blowing for a moment after pressing the return key. If you are not able to get the audio entropy to be something larger than 0, then it is likely that your microphone is off or not connected properly. If you are able to get values other than 0, but not high enough for Nautilus to accept them, it is likely that the recording level of your microphone input is set too low.
To accept an incoming call, use the following:
C:\NAUTILUS> nautilus -a -p COM1
The "-a" option tells Nautilus to answer the phone the next time someone calls, and the "-p COM1" option tells Nautilus to use COM1 to talk to the modem.
Here is the Internet version of the command line:
% nautilus -a -i
The "-a" option tells Nautilus to wait for packets on the proper port to establish the connection. The "-i"has the same meaning as for the originator's command line above.
As with originate mode, you must provide some noise into the microphone, or else Nautilus will give a warning that the audio entropy is too low.
Nautilus normally initializes the encryption key for your conversation using an ingenious technique called Diffie-Hellman key exchange after its inventors, or DH for short. DH avoids the need for preagreed shared secrets such as passphrases, but can be vulnerable to a "man in the middle" (MITM) attack by an active eavesdropper. To defeat this attack, Nautilus prints an authentication code (8 hex digits) as part of the key exchange. One user simply reads this code (by voice) to the other user, who verifies it against the code displayed on his screen. If the codes at both ends of the conversation match, the conversation is secure. For more info, see (Appendix D).
Typing "nautilus -h" will list all available program options along with brief descriptions of their use. Also, running Nautilus with the "-v" (verbose) option will print info on the screen about Nautilus's parameters at startup time.
This section tells you how to compile Nautilus on DOS and Unix systems. We distribute precompiled MSDOS binaries for user convenience, but for maximum security, you should compile any cryptographic program yourself on your own computer using a compiler that you know has not been tampered with.
To compile Nautilus, you'll need the RSAREF 2.0 library, available for free for non-commercial use in the US and Canada from RSA Laboratories (anonymous ftp to rsa.com for details).
These instructions assume you have Microsoft C version 7.0 or later. The makefile for Nautilus currently only works with Microsoft C, so if you have some other compiler, you're on your own. If you do manage to get Nautilus to build with some other compiler, please send us your changes and and we'll include them in future releases.
Alternatively, you can construct a project file for Nautilus and build it from within the project manager. Just use the existing makefile to guide you in the process of setting this up.
Nautilus currently runs on Sun workstations with audio hardware running SunOS 4.1.X and Solaris 2.X. It also runs on IBM PC-compatibles running Linux. To build Nautilus, you will need an ANSI C compiler like gcc.
To build Nautilus under SunOS/Solaris/Linux, perform the following steps:
Nautilus allows you to pre-specify a passphrase using an environment variable. Specifically, if one sets the NAUTILUS_PASSPHRASE variable before running Nautilus, the program will not prompt the user for a passphrase and will instead use the value of the environment variable. This enables Nautilus to be called from a script if the user so desires. CAUTION: Be very careful to destroy the NAUTILUS_PASSPHRASE variable when you are done with your conversation. If your passphrase is revealed to an enemy that has intercepted your transmission, the contents of your transmission can be easily decoded.
On a PC running MSDOS, Nautilus requires a Soundblaster compatible sound card. Installation software that comes with your Soundblaster tries to configure your system so that the BLASTER environment variable is set. Nautilus reads the contents of this environment variable in order to determine the operating parameters for the card (I/O base address, IRQ, DMA). If you are using another vendor's card (it must be hardware compatible with the Soundblaster), that doesn't set the BLASTER environment variable, you will need to set up a Nautilus configuration file which will tell the program what parameters to use for your card. See the section on setting up configuration files for information on how to do this.
Like your modem, Nautilus has two basic modes of operation. It can either make a call (originate) or accept a call (answer). The "-o" option tells Nautilus to originate a call, and the "-a" and "-A" commands tell Nautilus to answer a call.
Nautilus assumes default settings for which serial port to use on your computer, and at what speed to communicate with the modem (DTE speed). The default serial port is COM1 and the default DTE speed is 19,200. We recommend you use the default DTE speed of 19,200. Even though your modem may be able to use compression to transfer some kinds of data faster than its rated speed, it will not be able to compress the information sent to it by Nautilus. If you have a modem that has a throughput of 19,200 bps or more (e.g. V.32 turbo, V.FC, V.34, and HST), you may want to increase the DTE speed to 38400, but make sure you have a high speed serial card designed for high speed modems before you do this.
IMPORTANT: You must configure your modem to use hardware flow control for Nautilus to work. Unfortunately, the method for doing this varies from one brand of modem to another, so Nautilus cannot automatically do it for you. On the USR Courier modem, sending the string "AT&F1" will set hardware flow control among other things. For other modems, please consult your modem manual.
In order to change the default port from COM1 to something else, use the "-p" option followed by the name of the port you wish to use. The following table describes which ports may be selected:
These are the "usual" COM port settings for PC-Compatible computers. Note that in order to prevent interrupt conflicts, it is not possible to use both COM1 and COM3 or COM2 and COM4 at the same time.
If you are using nonstandard addresses or IRQ's for your COM ports, you need to customize Nautilus for your system using a configuration file. See the "Setting up configuration files" section of this document for more info.
If you wish to change the default DTE speed from 19,200 to a higher value, use the "-s" option followed by the speed you wish to use.
Nautilus currently includes four speech compression algorithms, also called "coders". "Coder" is a speech processing term that has nothing to do with cryptography; in this document we always refer to cryptographic coding as "encryption" and cryptographic codes as "ciphers" to distinguish this subject from speech coding.
The purpose of a speech coder is to convert raw digitized speech samples into a compressed form that can be sent over channels with limited bandwidth. Designing good speech coders is a highly technical subject involving tradeoffs between CPU power, data bandwidth, sound quality, and difficulty of implementation. Nautilus's current coders are fairly sophisticated, though there is still room for improvement.
Generally, today's best-performing speech coders run on special-purpose digital signal processing hardware since they need much more CPU power than typical PC's can provide. But as PC's get faster, we may be able to support higher quality coders.
Three of Nautilus's currently running speech coders use a technique called "switched prediction". Switched-predictive coders give a good tradeoff between CPU speed requirements and speech quality at a given bit rate. Nautilus has three SP coders with differing modem speed requirements, called SP64, SP85, and SP124. The numbers refer to the bit rates used by the coders: approximately 6400, 8500, and 12400 bits per second respectively, with the higher bit-rate coders naturally sounding the best. Because of the added data overhead imposed by Nautilus's two-way communication protocol, the coders require modem connections of 7200, 9600, and 14,400 bps respectively. 14,400 bps (v.32bis) is the most popular type of inexpensive high-speed computer modem at the time we write this. 9600 bps (v.32) is used by some older modems and is used as a fallback speed for 14,400 bps modems when the phone lines are noisy. 7200 bps seems to be about the highest speed that works reasonably well with v.32bis modems over cellular telephones and even that speed requires a fairly good cellular connection.
Nautilus's newest coder, LPC10, uses Linear Predictive Coding, and compresses speech to 2400 bps with quality nearly as good as the SP124 coder. This comes at the expense of significantly more CPU time, although it is able to run comfortably on a Sparc 2 or 486DX2-66 (slower machines may be possible). It will not run quickly enough on a machine without an FPU. Nautilus's overhead increases the bandwidth required to about 2800 bps for a direct modem-to-modem connection, and additional IP overhead increases this to about 4100 bps for an Internet connection. In either case, it should work with a 4800 bps connection, which is the lowest fallback speed that you normally ever get when you use a v.32 or faster modem. If your modem can connect at all (including over cellular phones) and you can run LPC10, Nautilus should work.
The LPC10 coder was obtained from URL:
ftp://ftp.super.org/pub/speech/ in file lpc10-1.0.tar.gz, and before that it came from the NSA (yes, that NSA). It was modified somewhat so that it could be included in Nautilus. The original and modified code is in Fortran, and the modified sources are available from:
http://www.arl.wustl.edu/~jaf/lpc/lpc10-1.2.tar.gz By default, Nautilus automatically selects the best sounding coder that will run on both users' machines. Either user can override the default coder by using the "-c" option. The option should be followed by the name of the coder you want ("SP64", "SP85", "LPC10" or "SP124"). You can also use the "-l coders" option to get a list of available coders (new ones may be added in future releases).
See the bibliography file "nautilus.bib" in this directory for references about speech coding and other subjects.
You may specify one of three encryption algorithms to secure your conversation from would-be eavesdroppers. Triple-DES is the most proven of the available ciphers, but also uses the most CPU. Blowfish is a relatively new cipher designed by the author of _Applied Cryptography_, Bruce Schneier, that is fast and shows promise of being strong. Finally, IDEA is another cipher popularized by PGP that has been included for completeness. Encryption can be specified using the "-e" option and following it with the name of the specified cipher or "NONE" to turn encryption off. Note that if the "-e" option is not specified, Nautilus will use the Blowfish cipher by default. To get a list of available ciphers, use the "-l ciphers" option.
Nautilus can read in a number of parameters from a configuration file. The parameters can be used to configure your serial port, sound card, and modem initialization string. If you are using a sound card that does not set the BLASTER environment variable (it must be soundblaster compatible), then you will have to set up a configuration file in order to configure it for use with your card.
The environment variable NAUTILUS_CONFIG_FILE specifies the pathname to a Nautilus configuration file. If the environment variable doesn't exist, Nautilus doesn't read a configuration file and uses its defaults. If it does exist, Nautilus attempts to read the file specified and overrides the defaults with the user-specified values.
The syntax of the configuration file is:
The following is a list of configuration variables and their types:
SPEED (numeric) - DTE baud rate PORT (string) - port name (e.g. COM2) MODEM_INIT (string) - modem initialization string (don't include "AT") SND_IO (numeric) - i/o base address of sound card SND_IRQ (numeric) - irq number of sound card SND_DMA (numeric) - dma channel of sound card MIC_SENS (string) - mic sensitivity (one of "LOW", "MEDIUM", or "HIGH") OUT_VOLUME (string) - output volume (one of "LOW", "MEDIUM", or "HIGH") COM1_IO (numeric) - i/o base address of COM1 serial port COM2_IO (numeric) - i/o base address of COM2 serial port COM3_IO (numeric) - i/o base address of COM3 serial port COM4_IO (numeric) - i/o base address of COM4 serial port COM1_IRQ (numeric) - IRQ (interrupt number) of COM1 port COM2_IRQ (numeric) - IRQ (interrupt number) of COM2 port COM3_IRQ (numeric) - IRQ (interrupt number) of COM3 port COM4_IRQ (numeric) - IRQ (interrupt number) of COM4 port UPGRADE_FILE (string)- filename to save upgrade instructions if you try talking to an incompatible version of Nautilus. The instructions are also shown on the screen. If you don't want them saved, set this to "". Default setting is filename "UPGRADE".
An example configuration file follows:
# # Example Nautilus Configuration File # PORT = "COM2" # specify default serial port SPEED = 38400 # specify default DTE speed MODEM_INIT = "M0" # turn modem speaker off SND_IO = 0x220 # specify I/O Base address of sound card SND_IRQ = 5 # specify IRQ for sound card SND_DMA = 1 # specify DMA channel for sound card MIC_SENS = "HIGH" # specify high mic sensitivity OUT_VOLUME = "LOW" # specify low audio output level
When you first start Nautilus up, it will play the message "Welcome to Nautilus" through your sound card. This lets you know that Nautilus is properly configured to use your sound card. If you prefer not to hear this message, you may specify the "-x" option on the command line.
Putting it all together:
To originate a call to another Nautilus user, type:
C:\NAUTILUS> nautilus -o -p com2 -s 38400 12025551212
This tells Nautilus use serial port COM2 with a DTE speed of 38400, to dial the phone number "12025551212", and attempt to connect to an awaiting Nautilus program at the other end.
To answer a call from another Nautilus user, type:
C:\NAUTILUS> nautilus -a
This tells Nautilus to configure the user's modem to answer the phone and will then attempt to establish a connection to the remote Nautilus after the modems have connected. The default port, COM1 is used as well as the default DTE speed of 19,200.
After Nautilus starts up and plays its welcome message, it will prompt you to enter a passphrase (unless you have specified a passphrase via the NAUTILUS_PASSPHRASE environment variable). At this time, you should type in the passphrase you and your friend have previously agreed upon. You will be asked to type the phrase twice to insure that you have not made a mistake. If the two phrases don't match, you will be given the opportunity to try again.
Once communication has been established, the originator will start out in talk mode. Pressing a key will cause Nautilus to switch modes between talking and listening. If the pass phrases typed by the users at both ends do not exactly match, the users will be unable to communicate with each other and will hear nothing but garbage coming out of their speakers.
An important option to remember when using Nautilus is "-h" (for "help"). Typing "nautilus -h" will cause Nautilus to print out a list of the commands it understands and their syntax. Also, running Nautilus with the "-v" (verbose) option will print info on the screen about Nautilus's parameters at startup time.
As of the version 1.5 release, Nautilus has been through four public beta test releases and reviewed by several expert cryptographers, and nobody has discovered any serious security problems with it. Some minor problems were found and fixed during the beta tests. We now have more confidence in Nautilus's security than we have for any comparable programs, mostly because the other programs have not withstood public scrutiny of their source code for as long (or at all).
Nonetheless, it's still possible that Nautilus has some security bugs that haven't yet been discovered. Although we now consider Nautilus to no longer be in "beta test", it has still not gotten nearly as much scrutiny as some of the better known email encryption programs. For very high security applications, we recommend avoiding placing your total faith in the security of Nautilus or any other link in your system. Rather, take an in-depth approach to security so that if any aspect of your communications chain is compromised, your overall system is still not broken.
We continue to encourage cryptographers and users alike to examine and test the program thoroughly, and *please* let us know if you find anything wrong. As usual, although we'll try to fix any bugs reported to us, WE CANNOT BE RESPONSIBLE FOR ANY ERRORS. Even if it uploads all your secret files to your mother-in-law's computer in the middle of the night.
Nautilus is available in three different formats. As a DOS executable, it is available as an archive in zip format along with it's associated documentation. In source format, it is available as either a zip-ed archive, or a gzip-compressed tar archive.
Nautilus is available at the following FTP sites:
ftp://ftp.csn.org:/mpj/I_will_not_export/crypto_???????/voice/
This is an export controlled ftp site: read /mpj/README for information on access.
ftp://ripem.msu.edu/pub/crypt/other/nautilus-phone-1.5a-source.tar.gz ftp://ripem.msu.edu/pub/crypt/msdos/nautilus-phone-1.5a-source.zip ftp://ripem.msu.edu/pub/crypt/msdos/nautilus-phone-1.5a-exe.zip
This is an export controlled ftp site: read /pub/crypt/GETTING_ACCESS for information on access.
You may be able to find additional ftp sites using the "archie" ftp site locating program. See http://www.earn.net/gnrt/archie.html for more info.
Sorry, but under current US law, Nautilus is legal for domestic use in the US only. We don't like this law but have to abide by it while it is in effect. Nautilus is distributed through export-restricted FTP sites for this reason. Export it at your own risk.
The Nautilus development team is now made up of Bill Dorsey, Paul Rubin, Andy Fingerhut, and Bill Soley. To contact the developers, send email to < nautilus@lila.com>.
Nautilus's 3DES implementation is adapted from code written by Richard Outerbridge. The IDEA implementation is by Colin Plumb. The Blowfish implementation is adapted from Bruce Schneier's original version, though we've optimized it considerably. Dan Bernstein, Colin Plumb, and Bob Baldwin examined the cryptographic protocols in the beta test versions and spotted some errors as well as making other worthwhile suggestions. Andy Fingerhut is responsible for extensively commenting the source code and has helped extensively with the Linux version of the program.
The Nautilus Developer's Key should not be used for the moment. They will be generating a new key shortly. In the meantime, if you must send sensitive information, please use Bill Dorsey's key (dorsey@lila.com).
A later version of this appendix will include advice on key selection and exchange, other privacy issues, etc. For now, here is what we have.
Nautilus provides three ciphers: Triple DES, Blowfish, and IDEA. No published methods exist that even make a scratch in the security of any of these algorithms. Blowfish is the fastest and the most technically straightforward, and is possibly the most secure of the three. But because it relatively new, there is a higher potential of effective attacks against it being discovered. Triple DES (abbreviated 3DES) is the most established cipher and has withstood over two decades of intense scrutiny by cryptographers. It is the safest choice, but it is slow. You might not be able to use 3DES with Nautilus on a 386-based computer (a 486 or higher PC or a Sparcstation should be no problem, but a 386DX/25 is known to not be fast enough). IDEA, like Blowfish, is relatively new; it also incorporates some unusual design principles that some cryptographers consider questionable. It is faster than 3DES but slower than Blowfish. Also, IDEA is patented; it is licensed for noncommercial use, but if you use Nautilus for business purposes, selecting the IDEA cipher may be a patent infringement. We include IDEA because it is used in the "PGP" email cryptography program; many PGP users have come to trust it, so we offer them the option of using it if that's what they want.
Blowfish is Nautilus's default cipher because of its speed, security, traditional design, and freedom from patents. If you don't make your own selection, you'll get Blowfish. But the choice is up to you.
All reliable signs are that Nautilus's cryptographic algorithms (especially 3DES) are completely unbreakable in practice, even by three-letter agencies. If someone does have a method that can break the ciphers, the method is only useful if they keep existence a deep secret--otherwise you could change ciphers and the attacker would have to start all over. And a fundamental fact about any secret weapon is that every time you use it, the less secret it becomes. So unless you're discussing matters so important that cryptanalysis organizations would find it worth sacrificing part of the usefulness of their most valuable tools, you can probably treat Nautilus's ciphers as if they were totally impregnable.
Unfortunately, a totally impregnable cipher used in an insecure way is like a totally impregnable steel bank vault door installed on a house with an unlocked window. If someone wants to eavesdrop on your communications while you're using Nautilus, cryptanalyzing the ciphers is probably the last thing they would try. You have to take precautions against other types of attacks as well.
First of all, although Nautilus's ciphers themselves are very secure and the program itself has withstood some scrutiny over its past few releases, it may still contain bugs. Nautilus's basic methods are simple and sound, but a design oversight or programming error may have seriously weakened its security. So far, no major security bugs in any Nautilus release have been reported, but a few minor ones in the early beta test versions have been found and fixed. We always announce such bugs when we learn of them.
Second, although Nautilus protects you from telephone line monitoring, it does nothing to protect you from other methods of privacy invasion. Indeed, history's most famous examples of electronic eavesdropping abuses--the Watergate break-in and the FBI's recordings of Martin Luther King--were done with room bugs rather than wiretaps. Secure telephones cannot protect your privacy against hidden microphones in your bedroom or office.
A complete discussion of non-cryptographic security is beyond the scope of this document, so we'll leave you on your own regarding technical countermeasures against bugging (hint: no method is likely to be completely effective, and we're skeptical of the motives of most people trying to sell you expensive antibugging devices). One simple thing you can do is use a headset microphone plugged into your sound board, rather than a loudspeaker and handheld microphone. This will make it much more difficult for a room bug to pick up the other end of the conversation (unless the other room is also bugged).
Finally, although the encrypted signals Nautilus passes through your modem cannot be decrypted without the secret key, your computer itself may leak unencrypted information either through electromagnetic radiation or because it has been tampered with. Displaying your passphrase on a CRT screen under any circumstances is a potentially grave mistake, since CRT emissions can be picked up from a considerable distance with the right equipment. With LCD screens, the problem may not be as bad--but we don't know. This subject also is beyond the scope of this document.
While Nautilus protects the contents of your phone calls, it does not and cannot do anything to conceal what time you make them or what numbers you call. It is relatively easy for attackers to illegally obtain your phone records, even if you have asked the phone company to place a passcode on your account. This has actually happened to at least one Nautilus user who was being illegally harassed by a private investigator. The PI called the phone company claiming to be the person he was actually investigating and requested info from "his" phone bill. When the phone company representative asked for the passcode, the PI replied that he had just had eye surgery and could not read the code. By a combination of whining and bullying, the PI intimidated the phone company rep into giving him the info in violation of phone company policy. The rep was mortified to find out afterwards that he had been defrauded, but the damage was done.
If you need to conceal the phone numbers of the people you talk to as well as the contents of the conversations, you must take further measures besides using Nautilus. Make the phone calls between public phones in places you cannot be predicted to be near. Don't call collect or use a phone company credit card associated with your phone account; use coins, or use a prepaid phone card that you bought with cash (7-11 stores sell these). Not many public phones today have data ports, but some do; they are generally easiest to find at airports. You can buy an acoustic coupler from Konexx that lets you connect your modem to a phone with no data port, though the bit rate may be low (possibly too low for Nautilus). If necessary, try several phones; and you may have best results with a v.34-capable modem even though you are only trying to get 7200 bps through the phone, because v.34 has potentially better impaired-line performance than v.32bis. Let us know if you try one of these devices and what kind of luck you have.
Nautilus now offers two different key exchange protocols to select session keys. This is done at the start of the Nautilus data conversation. Once the session key is chosen, it is used to encrypt the digitized voice packets in CFB mode for the rest of the conversation.
The two protocols offered are Diffie-Hellman key exchange and key exchange based on a pre-agreed shared secret passphrase. The DH protocol is very simple and exactly follows the standard references such as Applied Cryptography. Here is a description of the protocol used to derive a session key from pass phrases.
KEY EXCHANGE STRUCTURE +-------------------------+ | SESSION IV (8 bytes) | +-------------------------+ - | TRANSMIT IV (8 bytes) | | +-------------------------+ | | RECEIVE IV (8 bytes) | > Encrypted with selected cipher +-------------------------+ | | SESSION KEY (56 bytes) | | +-------------------------+ -
By default, Nautilus sets up the encryption key for your conversation using Diffie-Hellman (DH) key exchange. DH lets two users (call them Alice and Bob) select a random shared encryption key without previously having any shared secret information (such as passphrases) and without sending any secrets over the communication channel. However, it can be vulnerable to a "man-in-the-middle" (MITM) attack where an active eavesdropper (call her Eve) can cut the communications channel in the middle and masquerade as Alice to Bob, and as Bob to Alice. Now there are three participants and two comm links:
Alice --------- Eve --------- Bob link 1 link 2
Eve sets up independent DH keys with Alice and Bob (call these keys KA and KB). Eve decrypts Alice's remarks with KA, re-encrypts them with KB, and relays them to Bob, and vice versa, meanwhile saving copies of the unencrypted conversation to pass back to her superiors at the CIA. Alice and Bob are blissfully unaware that they're not both using the same key. To thwart the MITM attack, Nautilus prints a cryptographic checksum of the agreed DH key on the users' screens. At the beginning of the conversation, Alice should read this checksum (8 hex digits) to Bob, and Bob should verify that it matches the checksum displayed on his screen. This authenticates that both users are using the same key, unless the MITM is able to cut into the conversation at just the right time and imitate Alice's voice well enough to fool Bob into accepting the bogus checksum. This would require Eve to be a person rather than a program, and she would need to be listening to the conversation in real time and seizing control of it at just the right moment, when Bob asks Alice to read the checksum (or if Alice asks Bob, Eve has to imitate Bob's voice instead). The checksum approach, we feel, makes the MITM attack impractical in almost any realistic situation.
For more info on Diffie-Hellman key exchange, the MITM attack, and almost everything else cryptographic, see Applied Cryptography by Bruce Schneier.
Last modified: Sun Jun 16 23:56:30 PDT 1998