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Simple Secret Sharing Service for social and decentralised management of passwords

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Simple Secret Sharing

software by Dyne.org

Social and decentralised management of secrets

use secrets online

FXC crypto library status: Build Status

Secrets app code coverage: Code Climate

FXC code coverage: Code Climate

Secrets can be used to split a secret text into shares to be distributed to friends. When all friends agree, the shares can be combined to retrieve the original secret text, for instance to give consensual access to a lost pin, a password, a list of passwords, a private document or a key to an encrypted volume.

Secret sharing can be useful in many different situations and this tool is a simple and well documented free and open source implementation available for anyone to use from this website, but also independently on an offline PC.

Download the Secrets desktop application for off-line use from: files.dyne.org/secrets

How to use Secrets

1) Have a secret

For Secrets to be useful... one needs to have a secret :) don't be silly now, everyone has secrets. Lets say a backup of your passwords or a crypto wallet or a testament... remember it has to be just text and smaller than 1024 characters.

2) Trust a group of people

Then you need to have 5 trusted friends or colleagues (lets say trusted peers) who can agree on the need to access your secrets in certain circumstances, for your own well being or that of your family or organisation.

3) Paste the secret and distribute the shares

Clicking on Share Secrets you can paste the secret in the text form and click submit. In the blink of an eye our software will give you long strings of numbers and letters that can be distributed to all 5 trusted peers. Its just a text string so you can decide the best medium to transmit it, its also rather easy to dictate.

4) Explain to your peers what the secret is for

Take care to explain well the reason you are sharing this secret to all your trusted peers and the condition under which they shall meet again and combine all the shares to access the secret, which will be unknown to them until that moment. You need to trust them to respect your will on this, as they could also disregard the conditions and access your secret without your will.

5) Peers decide that your condition is met

Among the trusted peers holding your shared secret at least 3 can decide at any time that your conditions to retreive the secret are met. Please note that just 3 out of 5 are enough, which insures the availability of the secret even in case 2 peers are unavailable for some reason.

6) Peers meet to combine the shares

Your trusted peers can proceed to the Combine Secrets page even without your intervention. There they will find 3 text input fiels where to type or paste their share. Up to all of you to decide how this can happen, if the shares should be communicated to one person, or if all must be present and type it in, or dictate by phone, etc.

7) Your secret is revealed to your peers

Once the 3 shares are submitted, our software will show the original secret exactly as you typed it in. If there was a typo in any of the strings our software will return an error, so be careful to check that every single letter of the share is correct: a mistake in communication can make it impossible to retrieve your secret.

How secure is Secrets

Secrets makes use of the cryptographic library FXC which is built to provide multi-sig capabilities to the Freecoin toolkit. FXC code is completely covered by tests and can be used by other clojure applications via org.clojars.dyne.

The aim of the FXC and Secrets multi-sig implementation is to maintain backward compatibility across new versions and provide a library and application that is fully covered by tests units and whose functioning can be insured on a long-term basis.

Both Secrets and FXC are written in a functional, non-imperative, stateless language and don't use any database: all content passing through the software is not saved, only transformed and shown on screen. Secrets is a functional application configurate to split up to 1Kb of secret data into 5 shares of which 3 (a number we call "quorum") are enough to recover the initial secret.

If the secret being shared is really precious one should also consider adding an additional layer of encryption, for instance by using symmetric password encryption or even using public PGP keys of all participants.

To share large files it is recommended to use filesystem encryption (for instance using our other software Tomb) with a key that is then shared: this way the encrypted files can be stored in duplicate copies in possession of every participant, but they will be accessed only when enough participants agree.

Building Secrets on your own computer

Secrets is written in Clojure and is fully cross-platform: one can run it locally on a GNU/Linux machine, as well on Apple/OSX and MS/Windows.

The following software is required: OpenJDK, Clojure, Leiningen.

For instance on Devuan systems one can install all necessary dependencies using apt and the following packages: apt-get openjdk-7-jdk libversioneer-clojure haveged.

then install Leiningen which will take care of all Clojure dependencies:

mkdir ~/bin
wget https://raw.githubusercontent.com/technomancy/leiningen/stable/bin/lein -O ~/bin/lein
chmod +x ~/bin/lein

then from inside the Secrets source directory various commands can run lein ring server to serve the application from port http://localhost:3000, or lein uberjar to build a standalone jar application, or lein uberwar to build a standalone war application ready to be served from enterprise infrastructure using JBoss or Tomcat.

Configure

No configuration is needed to run secrets, however change of configuration parameters is optionally possible using a file called config.json, an example holding defaults is example-config.json. Beware that changes to the configuration may produce incompatibility between shares.

Acknowledgments

Haarlem's Alphabet textile, from a Vlisco exhibition

Secrets is Free and Open Source research and development activity funded by the European Commission in the context of the Collective Awareness Platforms for Sustainability and Social Innovation (CAPSSI) program. Secrets uses the underlying FXC cryptographic protocol, whose use cases relate to trust management and social digital currency, explained in detail in the deliverable Implementation of digital social currency infrastructure (D5.5) produced as part of the D-CENT project (grant nr. 610349) and adopted as a component of the social wallet toolkit being developed for the PIE project (grant nr. 687922).

Industry standard addressed: Information technology -- Security techniques -- Secret sharing

The Secret Sharing algorithm adopted is based on Shamir's Secret Sharing, references:

  • Shamir, Adi (1979), "How to share a secret", Communications of the ACM 22 (11): 612–613
  • Knuth, D. E. (1997), The Art of Computer Programming, II: Seminumerical Algorithms: 505

The Secret Sharing algorithm used internally is implemented in Java by Tim Tiemens, adopted with a 4096 cipher prime number. The Integer Compression algorithm used internally is the FastPFOR128 by Daniel Lemire, see: Lemire, D. and Boytsov, L. "Decoding billions of integers per second through vectorization" (2015).

License

Secrets is Copyright (C) 2015-2017 by the Dyne.org Foundation

Secrets software and documentation are designed, written and maintained by Denis Roio jaromil@dyne.org

Thanks for ideas and inspirations to Francesca Bria, Marco Sachy and Enric Durán Giralt.

This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
it under the terms of the GNU Affero General Public License as published by
the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or
(at your option) any later version.

This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.  See the
GNU Affero General Public License for more details.

You should have received a copy of the GNU Affero General Public License
along with this program.  If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.