Skip to content
Vol. 1 · Ed. 2026
CyberGlossary
Entry № 881

PAKE (Password-Authenticated Key Exchange)

Qu'est-ce que PAKE (Password-Authenticated Key Exchange) ?

PAKE (Password-Authenticated Key Exchange)A class of cryptographic protocols (SRP, OPAQUE, SPAKE2, CPace) that let two parties derive a strong shared key from a low-entropy password without exposing the password to offline brute-force or to passive eavesdroppers.


Password-Authenticated Key Exchange (PAKE) protocols solve a long-standing problem: how to let a user prove possession of a password to a server, and derive an authenticated session key, without ever sending the password (or anything offline-brute-forceable from it) over the wire. The first widely deployed PAKE was SRP-6a (used by Apple iCloud, 1Password, ProtonMail). Modern designs include SPAKE2 (used in CHIP/Matter device commissioning, IETF RFC 9382), CPace (the IETF augmented PAKE recommended in RFC 9380), and OPAQUE (an asymmetric / augmented PAKE that hides the password from the server even during enrolment). PAKE properties matter: a passive attacker on the network learns nothing about the password; an active attacker can only attempt one password per online interaction (no offline grinding); and an attacker who breaches the server's password database cannot impersonate users without further work. The IETF CFRG selected CPace and OPAQUE in 2020 as recommended modern PAKE designs. Adoption is growing: Matter uses SPAKE2 for QR-code device pairing, WPA3 uses Dragonfly (a PAKE-like SAE handshake), and several password managers and identity products now ship OPAQUE.

Exemples

  1. 01

    Matter (smart-home protocol) uses SPAKE2 with a setup code printed on the device's QR sticker to establish an authenticated channel during commissioning.

  2. 02

    A password manager replaces 'hash and compare' login with OPAQUE so its server never learns the user's master password even at registration.

Questions fréquentes

Qu'est-ce que PAKE (Password-Authenticated Key Exchange) ?

A class of cryptographic protocols (SRP, OPAQUE, SPAKE2, CPace) that let two parties derive a strong shared key from a low-entropy password without exposing the password to offline brute-force or to passive eavesdroppers. Cette notion relève de la catégorie Cryptographie en cybersécurité.

Que signifie PAKE (Password-Authenticated Key Exchange) ?

A class of cryptographic protocols (SRP, OPAQUE, SPAKE2, CPace) that let two parties derive a strong shared key from a low-entropy password without exposing the password to offline brute-force or to passive eavesdroppers.

Comment fonctionne PAKE (Password-Authenticated Key Exchange) ?

Password-Authenticated Key Exchange (PAKE) protocols solve a long-standing problem: how to let a user prove possession of a password to a server, and derive an authenticated session key, without ever sending the password (or anything offline-brute-forceable from it) over the wire. The first widely deployed PAKE was SRP-6a (used by Apple iCloud, 1Password, ProtonMail). Modern designs include SPAKE2 (used in CHIP/Matter device commissioning, IETF RFC 9382), CPace (the IETF augmented PAKE recommended in RFC 9380), and OPAQUE (an asymmetric / augmented PAKE that hides the password from the server even during enrolment). PAKE properties matter: a passive attacker on the network learns nothing about the password; an active attacker can only attempt one password per online interaction (no offline grinding); and an attacker who breaches the server's password database cannot impersonate users without further work. The IETF CFRG selected CPace and OPAQUE in 2020 as recommended modern PAKE designs. Adoption is growing: Matter uses SPAKE2 for QR-code device pairing, WPA3 uses Dragonfly (a PAKE-like SAE handshake), and several password managers and identity products now ship OPAQUE.

Comment se défendre contre PAKE (Password-Authenticated Key Exchange) ?

Les défenses contre PAKE (Password-Authenticated Key Exchange) combinent habituellement des contrôles techniques et des pratiques opérationnelles, comme détaillé dans la définition ci-dessus.

Quels sont les autres noms de PAKE (Password-Authenticated Key Exchange) ?

Noms alternatifs courants : Password-Authenticated Key Exchange, Augmented PAKE.

Termes liés

Voir aussi