CrypTag

加密、可标记、可搜索的云存储。在 DEF CON 23 上亮相。「Encrypted, taggable, searchable cloud storage. Unveiled at DEF CON 23」

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CrypTag

Encrypted, taggable, searchable cloud storage.

CrypTag was announced at DEF CON 23 in August of 2015. Presentation
slides:
https://www.slideshare.net/elimisteve/cryptag-building-encrypted-taggable-searchable-zeroknowledge-systems-59707471.

What is CrypTag?

CrypTag is an idea, a spec, an API, and a piece of software that makes
it easy to build a zero-knowledge system, which means that the server
holding user data doesn't know what it is (since it's encrypted).

It is meant as a primitive to be used to build more sophisticated
systems that would rather not re-implement the pieces necessary to
build a zero-knowledge system, but several useful command line
applications have been built with it so far, namely cput (for
encrypting/saving files), cget (for fetching/decrypting files), and
cpass (CryptPass, a password manager).

To use a command line password manager, CryptPass, see "Getting
Started with CryptPass", below.

How is it searchable and encrypted?

It's not fully searchable; you can query by tag. See slide 7 of the
presentation from DEF CON 23:
https://www.slideshare.net/elimisteve/cryptag-building-encrypted-taggable-searchable-zeroknowledge-systems-59707471/8

Then the server stores the tags in plaintext?

Nope! The client stores mapping between tags ("snowden") and a random
hex string ("b6a27d9"), and the server only ever sees the random
strings.

(The client also encrypts these mappings and stores them to the
server, too.)

Use Cases (what CrypTag is good at) + Syncing via Dropbox

I personally have virtually all data I want shared between my laptops
in one Dropbox folder that CrypTag-based programs add (encrypted) data
to and grab it from.

I've been using cpass to store and fetch...

  1. Passwords (cpass @elimisteve)
  2. Credit card numbers (cpass visa digits)
  3. Quotes (cpass nietzsche quote)
  4. Bookmarks, tagged like on Pinboard or Delicious (cpass url snowden)
  5. Command line commands -- cross-machine shell history! (cpass install docker)
  6. GitHub recovery codes (cpass github recoverycode)

For more on getting started, including how to safely and securely
share passwords with others via a shared Dropbox folder, check out
this section of the README:
https://github.com/cryptag/cryptag#getting-started-with-cryptpass

It's still early days for CrypTag and CryptPass, so don't trust your
life with cpass. Eventually I will have the code professionally
audited for security flaws.

Getting Started with CryptPass

The current focus for CrypTag is creating a password manager out of it
called CryptPass. CryptPass exists as a command line tool (cpass)
you can use to store and retrieve passwords. Unencrypted passwords
never touch disk; they are stored encrypted, read into memory, then
printed to your terminal for you to use, with the first one found
added to your clipboard.

TL;DR version

Install + config:

go get github.com/cryptag/cryptag/cmd/cpass
cpass

Create passwords, fetch them by tag, or delete them:

cpass create mytwitterp4ssw0rd twitter @myusername tag3 tag4
cpass @myusername
cpass delete twitter

Keep reading for more advanced options, including password sharing via
shared Dropbox folders.

Installing cpass

Install Go (instructions), then run

go get github.com/cryptag/cryptag/cmd/cpass

That's it! Now run

cpass

cpass will generate a new encryption key to store your passwords
with, as well as create the directories it will use to store your
data, all in ~/.cryptag (by default).

Using cpass

Create a new password and associated tags with commands like:

cpass create mycr4zyemailp4ssw0rd gmail email elimisteve@gmail

cpass create mytwitterp4ssw0rd twitter @elimisteve

cpass create mycr4zyAWSp4ssw0rd4myj0b work aws

Fetch the password you're looking for and see them printed to the
screen with commands like:

cpass gmail

cpass @elimisteve

cpass aws work

For convenience, cpass adds the first password found to your
clipboard so you can paste it into whichever program you're using.

To view all your passwords, run

cpass all

And finally, to delete all passwords with certain tags, run

cpass delete aws

To only delete one specific password, not all passwords with a generic
tag (e.g., "email") that you may have used to tag multiple passwords,
use the password's tag of the form id:..., which is auto-generated
and guaranteed to be unique:

cpass delete id:a91d46c7-45bb-48e4-43d1-642196df15b2

Multiple Storage Backends

Maybe you want to store your personal data in ~/.cryptag but have
passwords you share with colleagues at ~/Dropbox/cryptag_work, for
example. (With cpass this is secure because plaintext, unencrypted
passwords will never touch ~/Dropbox/cryptag_work.)

Create a new backend with the desired name (e.g., "work") by running

BACKEND=work cpass

You can then change the value of DataPath at the end of
~/.cryptag/backends/work.json to wherever you want your work
passwords stored (e.g., /home/MYUSERNAME/Dropbox/cryptag_work),
being sure to use the absolute path.

(Dropbox note: CrypTag-based programs generally, and cpass
specifically, store each piece of data (e.g., each password and each
tag) in a separate file, so it is safe for multiple people to create
passwords simultaneously and save them to a shared Dropbox folder,
unlike with KeePass, KeePassX, 1Password, and some other password
managers.)

Now you can save shared work passwords with the same commands as
before, except with the BACKEND environment variable
set:

BACKEND=work cpass create mycr4zyAWSp4ssw0rd4myj0b work aws

Now you should share ~/.cryptag/backends/work.json with your
colleagues -- or at least the encryption key -- so that you can
decrypt passwords saved by each other.

More Convenient Multiple Storage Backends

See this issue for
discussion on how to make storing data in multiple places much better!
I would love your input.

I currently do this:

echo 'BACKEND=work cpass "$@"' > ~/bin/work
chmod +x ~/bin/work

so I can simply do

work create mycr4zyAWSp4ssw0rd4myj0b aws

to create work passwords, or

work aws

to fetch them.

Non-use Cases (what CrypTag is not good at)

Anything that requires rapid changes being made to data by multiple
users, such as:

  • Real-time collaborative document editing

    • Real-time spreadsheet editing should work OK (as long as you're OK
      with "last write wins" to a cell), since each cell can be its own
      Row that can be changed concurrently with other Rows

Any data that is "write once, read many times" is ideal for CrypTag.

Future Plans

I have big plans for CryptPass and other CrypTag-based software to
help make the world's data -- passwords, everything stored "in the
cloud", file backups, bookmarks and so on -- more secure.

I believe that you should be able access your data from any of your
devices, and just grab what you need, exactly like you can from the
Dropbox mobile app. Or if you don't mind storing all your data on
your computer, being able to use Dropbox (or anything similar) to sync
all your data between all your devices without having to trust the
company storing your data for you
is also deeply important; we should
all benefit from the convenience of cloud storage without giving up
any privacy whatsoever.

So whatever feedback you may have, please please send it my way! Yes,
there will be a graphical version of CryptPass usable on Windows,
Mac OS X, and Linux desktops. Eventually I'd like to have mobile
apps, too, of course.

I am open to all questions, comments, suggestions, insults, and
whatever else you've got.

Geeky Feedback Requested

The graphical version of CryptPass (that uses Electron + React, that
then talks to a local CrypTag daemon) once the command line version,
cpass, is better, and once more complex storage
questions
are
answered, which I'd appreciate feedback on from those of you who may
want to store different kinds of data in different places (e.g., all
passwords in a local directory, all work passwords in a shared Dropbox
folder, and all backups in S3).

I'd love to create mobile versions of CryptPass, probably starting
with Ubuntu Phone, because I can write it all in Go :-), and now that
both Android and iOS apps can call into Go code using some new
awesome mobile
shit
, it
shouldn't be necessary to port the core CrypTag logic to another
language.

Thank you! Here's to a more privacy-friendly future for all!

Cryptography Notice

This distribution includes cryptographic software. The country in which you currently reside may have restrictions on the import, possession, use, and/or re-export to another country, of encryption software.
BEFORE using any encryption software, please check your country's laws, regulations and policies concerning the import, possession, or use, and re-export of encryption software, to see if this is permitted.
See http://www.wassenaar.org/ for more information.

The U.S. Government Department of Commerce, Bureau of Industry and Security (BIS), has classified this software as Export Commodity Control Number (ECCN) 5D002.C.1, which includes information security software using or performing cryptographic functions with asymmetric algorithms.
The form and manner of this distribution makes it eligible for export under the License Exception ENC Technology Software Unrestricted (TSU) exception (see the BIS Export Administration Regulations, Section 740.13) for both object code and source code.

Main metrics

Overview
Name With Ownercryptag/cryptag
Primary LanguageGo
Program languageGo (Language Count: 3)
Platform
License:Other
所有者活动
Created At2015-02-24 08:05:44
Pushed At2025-04-17 02:49:59
Last Commit At2025-04-16 19:49:54
Release Count29
Last Release Namev0.10.0 (Posted on )
First Release Namev0.2 (Posted on )
用户参与
Stargazers Count209
Watchers Count18
Fork Count31
Commits Count559
Has Issues Enabled
Issues Count97
Issue Open Count39
Pull Requests Count14
Pull Requests Open Count1
Pull Requests Close Count4
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