Ah, sorry about neglecting the other curves here. I'm much less
concerned about the curve changes.

Someone who chooses these curves has thought about it and made their
choice. Someone who is on RSA1024 might not know that they're on the
"very best of y2k" playlist. The NSA may have suggested everybody move
away from these curves ten years ago but did so without publishing their
reasoning, if I recall correctly, and there hasn't been compelling
movement in the open literature that I know of.

To the best of my knowledge, these curves are fine now and nobody
expects drastic movement in the next few years.

Thanks

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https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/2073126

Title:
  More nuanced public key algorithm revocation

Status in apt package in Ubuntu:
  Fix Released
Status in apt source package in Noble:
  Fix Committed
Status in apt source package in Oracular:
  Fix Released

Bug description:
  (Please see https://wiki.ubuntu.com/AptUpdates for the versioning)

  [Impact]
  We have received feedback from users that use NIST-P256 keys for their 
repositories that are upset about receiving a warning. We also revoked 
additional ECC curves, which may still be considered trusted, so we should not 
bump them to errors.

  Also existing users may have third-party repositories that use
  1024-bit RSA keys and we have not adequately informed them yet
  perhaps. We tried to revoke them in the 2.8.0, 2.8.1, and 2.8.2
  updates (see bug 2060721). This has been deferred to a later update
  than 2.8.3 such that we can solve the warnings and other bugs.

  [Solution]
  Hence we will restore all elliptic curve keys of 256 or more bit to trusted:

      
">=rsa1024,ed25519,ed448,nistp256,nistp384,nistp512,brainpoolP256r1,brainpoolP320r1,brainpoolP384r1,brainpoolP512r1,secp256k1";

  Note that we still keep rsa1024 as allowed.

  At the same time we will also introduce a more nuanced approach to
  revocations by introducing a 'next' level that issues a warning if the
  key is not allowed in it and a 'future' level that will issue an audit
  message with the --audit option.

  For the next level, we will set it to:

      ">=rsa2048,ed25519,ed448,nistp256,nistp384,nistp512"

  This means we restrict warnings to Brainpool curves and the secp256k1
  key, which we have not received any feedback about them being used
  yet.

  For the future level, we will take a strong approach to best practices
  as it is only seen when explictly running with --audit and the
  intention is to highlight best practices. It will be set to

      ">=rsa3072,ed25519,ed448";

  Which corresponds to the NIST recommendations for 2031 (and as little
  curves as possible). This level is unused in the 24.04 upload as the
  corresponding "audit" log level has not been backported to it.

  [Test plan]
  Tests are included in the library unit tests for parsing the specification 
strings; we have also included a test for the gpgv method to ensure that it 
produces the correct outcome for both 'next' and 'future' revoked keys.

  Some smoke tests:

  - Observe one a system with a 1024R signed repository that it keeps working 
and produces a warning (ensures a key listed in "next" but not in "current" 
warns)
  - Sign a repository with a NIST P-256 key and ensure it does not produce 
warnings (ensures that a key listed in "current" and "next" does not warn)

  [Where problems could occur]
  There could of course be bugs in the implementation of the new feature; this 
could result in verification of files failing. This also happens if you specify 
an invalid `next` or `future` string.

  There cannot be any false positives: The new levels are only
  *additional* checks, anything not in the `Assert-Pubkey-Algo` list is
  still revoked.

  The change in behavior of APT::Key::Assert-Pubkey-Algo _may_ cause a
  regression if you purposefully override `APT::Key::Assert-Pubkey-Algo`
  to *NOT* include algorithms that you actually use; which seems highly
  unlikely given that you'd be introducing warnings to your system. If
  you don't have a custom value set (or no warnings with your custom
  value), you have no regression there.

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