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Scrypt Is Maximally Memory-Hard
[chapter]
2017
Lecture Notes in Computer Science
Memory-hard functions (MHFs) are hash algorithms whose evaluation cost is dominated by memory cost. As memory, unlike computation, costs about the same across different platforms, MHFs cannot be evaluated at significantly lower cost on dedicated hardware like ASICs. MHFs have found widespread applications including password hashing, key derivation, and proofs-of-work. This paper focuses on scrypt, a simple candidate MHF designed by Percival, and described in RFC 7914. It has been used within a
doi:10.1007/978-3-319-56617-7_2
fatcat:hgoqht4am5hv7gzssya5icaxta