# Cryptographic concepts/terms ``` Lars suggests that we should have a chapter where we introduce cryptographic terms that we use, and give short definitions (without getting into how specific algorithms work) This would be a good place to introduce visualizations for cryptographic primitives ``` ## Public-key cryptography https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Public-key_cryptography ### Asymmetric cryptographic key pairs In many places, we'll deal with asymmetric cryptographic key pairs: ![Image](diag/cryptographic_keys.png "A cryptographic keypair") A cryptographic key pair consists of a public and a private part. In this document, we'll show the public part of a cryptographic key in green, and the private part in red. We'll usually visualize cryptographic keypairs in this more compact form: ![Image](diag/keypair.png "A cryptographic keypair") Note that in many contexts, only the public part is present (more on that later): ![Image](diag/keypair_pub.png "Only the public part of a cryptographic keypair") ### Public-key cryptography in OpenPGP OpenPGP makes heavy use of public-key cryptography. However, for historical reasons, OpenPGP uses the terms "public/secret" instead of "public/private." So when reading the RFC, or other documentation, you will encounter the term "secret key," instead of the more common "private key." ### Symmetric encryption https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Symmetric-key_algorithm [TODO: visualization?] #### Symmetric cryptography in OpenPGP Symmetric encryption is a core concept in OpenPGP. It usually comes up involving the term "session key." "Session keys" in OpenPGP are symmetric cryptographic keys.