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Updating Cryptography section
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@ -3,7 +3,7 @@ title: Cryptography and Certificate Management
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description: Get an overview of cryptography and certificate management in Windows
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ms.topic: conceptual
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ms.date: 07/10/2024
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ms.reviewer: skhadeer, raverma
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ms.reviewer: skhadeer, aathipsa
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---
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# Cryptography and Certificate Management
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@ -18,12 +18,19 @@ Windows cryptographic modules provide low-level primitives such as:
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- Random number generators (RNG)
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- Symmetric and asymmetric encryption (support for AES 128/256 and RSA 512 to 16384, in 64-bit increments and ECDSA over NIST-standard prime curves P-256, P-384, P-521)
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- Hashing (support for SHA-256, SHA-384, and SHA-512)
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- Hashing (support for SHA-256, SHA-384, SHA-512, and SHA-3*)
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- Signing and verification (padding support for OAEP, PSS, PKCS1)
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- Key agreement and key derivation (support for ECDH over NIST-standard prime curves P-256, P-384, P-521, and HKDF)
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These modules are natively exposed on Windows through the Crypto API (CAPI) and the Cryptography Next Generation API (CNG) which is powered by Microsoft's open-source cryptographic library SymCrypt. Application developers can use these APIs to perform low-level cryptographic operations (BCrypt), key storage operations (NCrypt), protect static data (DPAPI), and securely share secrets (DPAPI-NG).
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*With this release we added support for the SHA-3 family of hash functions and SHA-3 derived functions (SHAKE, cSHAKE, and KMAC). These are the latest standardized hash functions by the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) and can be leveraged through the Windows CNG library. Below is a list of the supported SHA-3 functions:
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Supported SHA-3 hash functions: SHA3-256, SHA3-384, SHA3-512 (SHA3-224 is not supported)
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Supported SHA-3 HMAC algorithms: HMAC-SHA3-256, HMAC-SHA3-384, HMAC-SHA3-512
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Supported SHA-3 derived algorithms: extendable-output functions (XOF) (SHAKE128, SHAKE256), customizable XOFs (cSHAKE128, cSHAKE256), and KMAC (KMAC128, KMAC256, KMACXOF128, KMACXOF256).
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## Certificate management
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Windows offers several APIs to operate and manage certificates. Certificates are crucial to public key infrastructure (PKI) as they provide the means for safeguarding and authenticating information. Certificates are electronic documents used to claim ownership of a public key. Public keys are used to prove server and client identity, validate code integrity, and used in secure emails. Windows offers users the ability to autoenroll and renew certificates in Active Directory with Group Policy to reduce the risk of potential outages due to certificate expiration or misconfiguration. Windows validates certificates through an automatic update mechanism that downloads certificate trust lists (CTL) daily. Trusted root certificates are used by applications as a reference for trustworthy PKI hierarchies and digital certificates. The list of trusted and untrusted certificates are stored in the CTL and can be updated by administrators. In the case of certificate revocation, a certificate is added as an untrusted certificate in the CTL causing it to be revoked globally across user devices immediately.
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