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{{Short description|Open competition to select password hash functions}}
{{Short description|Open competition to select password hash functions}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=January 2016}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=January 2016}}
The '''Password Hashing Competition''' was an open competition announced in 2013 to select one or more password hash functions that can be recognized as a recommended standard. It was modeled after the successful [[Advanced Encryption Standard process]] and [[NIST hash function competition]], but directly organized by cryptographers and security practitioners. On 20 July 2015, [[Argon2]] was selected as the final PHC winner, with special recognition given to four other password hashing schemes: Catena, [[Lyra2]], yescrypt and Makwa.<ref>[https://password-hashing.net "Password Hashing Competition"]
The '''Password Hashing Competition''' was an open competition announced in 2013 to select one or more password hash functions that can be recognized as a recommended standard. It was modeled after the successful [[Advanced Encryption Standard process]] and [[NIST hash function competition]], but directly organized by cryptographers and security practitioners. On 20 July 2015, [[Argon2]] was selected as the final PHC winner, with special recognition given to four other password hashing schemes: Catena, [[Lyra2]], [[yescrypt]] and Makwa.<ref>[https://password-hashing.net "Password Hashing Competition"]
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Latest revision as of 01:08, 11 October 2023

The Password Hashing Competition was an open competition announced in 2013 to select one or more password hash functions that can be recognized as a recommended standard. It was modeled after the successful Advanced Encryption Standard process and NIST hash function competition, but directly organized by cryptographers and security practitioners. On 20 July 2015, Argon2 was selected as the final PHC winner, with special recognition given to four other password hashing schemes: Catena, Lyra2, yescrypt and Makwa.[1]

One goal of the Password Hashing Competition was to raise awareness of the need for strong password hash algorithms, hopefully avoiding a repeat of previous password breaches involving weak or no hashing, such as the ones involving RockYou (2009), JIRA, Gawker (2010), PlayStation Network outage, Battlefield Heroes (2011), eHarmony, LinkedIn, Adobe, ASUS, South Carolina Department of Revenue (2012), Evernote, Ubuntu Forums (2013), etc.[2][3][4][5][6]

The organizers were in contact with NIST, expecting an impact on its recommendations.[7]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

External links[edit]