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Home/ Questions/Q 179381
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Asked: May 11, 20262026-05-11T14:23:49+00:00 2026-05-11T14:23:49+00:00

I am asking from a more secure perspective. I can imagine a scenario with

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I am asking from a ‘more secure’ perspective. I can imagine a scenario with two required private keys needed for decryption scenarios that may make this an attractive model. I believe it is not adding any additional security other than having to compromise two different private keys. I think that if it was any more secure than encrypting it one million times would be the best way to secure information.

Update a couple of years later: As Rasmus Faber points out 3DES encryption was added to extend the life of DES encryption which had widespread adoption. Encrypting twice using the same key suffers from the Meet in the Middle Attack while encrypting a third time does in fact offer greater security

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  1. 2026-05-11T14:23:50+00:00Added an answer on May 11, 2026 at 2:23 pm

    I understand that it is more secure provided you use different keys. But don’t take my word for it. I’m not a crypto-analyst. I don’t even play one on TV.

    The reason I understand it to be more secure is that you’re using extra information for encoding (both multiple keys and an unknown number of keys (unless you publish the fact that there’s two)).

    Double encryption using the same key makes many codes easier to crack. I’ve heard this for some codes but I know it to be true for ROT13 🙂

    I think the security scheme used by Kerberos is a better one than simple double encryption.

    They actually have one master key whose sole purpose is to encrypt the session key and that’s all the master key is used for. The session key is what’s used to encrypt the real traffic and it has a limited lifetime. This has two advantages.

    • Evil dudes don’t have time to crack the session key since, by the time they’ve managed to do it, those session keys are no longer in use.
    • Those same evil dudes don’t get an opportunity to crack the master key simply because it’s so rarely used (they would need a great many encrypted packets to crack the key).

    But, as I said, take that with a big grain of salt. I don’t work for the NSA. But then I’d have to tell you that even if I did work for the NSA. Oh, no, you won’t crack me that easily, my pretty.

    Semi-useful snippet: Kerberos (or Cerberus, depending on your lineage) is the mythological three-headed dog that guards the gates of Hell, a well-chosen mascot for that security protocol. That same dog is called Fluffy in the Harry Potter world (I once had a girlfriend whose massive German Shepherd dog was called Sugar, a similarly misnamed beast).

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