
doi: 10.1049/el:19961506
A connection between linear codes and the correlation attack conditioned on the output of binary combiners with memory is established. Using a sort of random coding argument, it is shown that an average combiner with memory is potentially vulnerable to such an attack only if the number of outputs is equal to or greater than the number of inputs. The required computational complexity in the former case is exponentially greater than in the latter case.
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