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Some cryptographic primitives require the IV only to be non-repeating, and the required randomness is derived internally. In this case, the IV is commonly called a [[cryptographic nonce|nonce]] (''number used once''), and the primitives (e.g. [[Block_cipher_mode_of_operation#CBC|CBC]]) are considered ''stateful'' rather than ''randomized''. This is because an IV need not be explicitly forwarded to a recipient but may be derived from a common state updated at both sender and receiver side. (In practice, a short nonce is still transmitted along with the message to consider message loss.) An example of stateful encryption schemes is the [[counter mode]] of operation, which has a [[sequence number]] for a nonce.
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