Attacks are presented on the IBM 4758 CCA and the Visa Security Module. Two new attack principles are demonstrated. Related
key attacks use known or chosen differences between two cryptographic keys. Data protected with one key can then be abused
by manipulation using the other key. Meet in the middle attacks work by generating a large number of unknown keys of the same
type, thus reducing the key space that must be searched to discover the value of one of the keys in the type. Design heuristics
are presented to avoid these attacks and other common errors.