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Home/ Questions/Q 8293851
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: June 8, 20262026-06-08T13:58:42+00:00 2026-06-08T13:58:42+00:00

Introduction: For my personal webserver I have setup apache with a self signed certificate

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Introduction:
For my personal webserver I have setup apache with a self signed certificate to enable TLS security to learn and test.
I have this line in virtualhost:

SSLProtocol -all -SSLv3 +TLSv1  
SSLCipherSuite TLSv1:+HIGH:!MEDIUM

With firefox, I get Camellia-256 encrypted connection, and with opera I get TLS v1.0 256 bit AES (1024 bit DHE_RSA/SHA) with the same config in same server.

That leads me to question, which is stronger, AES, or Camellia?

I noticed that if I disable camellia with SSLCipherSuite TLSv1:+HIGH:!MEDIUM:!CAMELLIA then, firefox takes the same suite than opera.

In my config, I also try to disable all SSL versions to enable only TLS (advise needed if I didn’t do so correctly), but the original question still stands: Which one should be stronger?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-06-08T13:58:44+00:00Added an answer on June 8, 2026 at 1:58 pm

    I would be more worried about the fact that your SSL encryption is not secure because you are only using 1024 bit asymmetric encryption to protect your keys.

    Adi Shamir (the ‘S’ in RSA) recommended moving to 2048 bit keys back in 2006, even the american standards institute (NIST) have made 2048 bit a required minimum strength since January 2011 (see NIST SP800-57 for recommended minumum key strengths — this states 2048 bit for both RSA and DH/el-gamal).

    In short, make sure your RSA encryption is strong enough first, as it is used to protect the symmetric keys (AES/Camellia). Never rely on a key which is protected by a weaker key (this is like using a secure 256 bit random WPA 2 key on a wireless access point and then trusting it to WPS which will reveal in in a few hours!)

    Even if this is a test system, learn to use crypto the way you intend to go forward; do not compromise on certificate key strength (all CAs these days should reject 1024 bit requests or CSRs using MD5 on sight, if not don’t use them; create your own test certs as you would a real request, and don’t use default key sizes).

    Difficult to compare strengths, both have received cryptographic analysis (AES more publicly) and are adequate for securing data.

    At the risk of repeating myself, I’d be more worried about the 1024 bits used to secure the key negotiation.

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