Interaction Key Generation Schemes (Protocol) (<Special Section>Cryptography and Information Security)
スポンサーリンク
概要
- 論文の詳細を見る
This paper proposes a new concept of Interaction key. An interaction key is a group public key that corresponds to a shared key shared by multiple users, and it has a new feature that an interaction key generator can verify the following: the shared key has been generated now, and the shared key has not existed before. In other words, the multiple users can prove them to the key generator. This feature is different from Time-stamp technology proves that a message existed at a point in time. Here, the key generator is a third party that can observe communications of the multiple users. Present technology only allows a group member or a privileged entity to generate a group public key. We are not presently aware of a technology where a third party can generate the group public key as above. The interaction key technology is useful both for generating public key certificates and for message certification. In a certificate generation, a certificate authority can issue a public key certificate with the shared key (i.e. secret key) to be used by the multiple users. In a message certification, the users can prove the signed message has not existed before, since the message is signed by the shared key corresponds to the interaction key.
- 社団法人電子情報通信学会の論文
- 2004-01-01
著者
-
MATSUMOTO Tsutomu
Graduate School of Environment and Information Sciences, Yokohama National University
-
Anzai Jun
Graduate School Of Environment And Information Scienc Es Yokohama National University:mobile Termina
-
Anzai Jun
Graduate School Of Environment And Information Sciences Yokohama National University:mobile Software
-
Matsumoto Tsutomu
Graduate School Of Environment And Information Sciences Yokohama National University
-
Matsumoto Tsutomu
Graduate School Of Engineering Yokohama National University:graduate School Of Environment And Infor
関連論文
- Unconditionally Secure Group Signatures
- How to Maximize the Potential of FPGA-Based DSPs for Modular Exponentiation
- Unconditionally Secure Group Signatures
- Interaction Key Generation Schemes (Protocol) (Cryptography and Information Security)
- Unconditionally Secure Authenticated Encryption(Discrete Mathematics and Its Applications)
- A Distributed User Revocation Scheme for Ad-Hoc Networks(Advances in Ad Hoc Mobile Communications and Networking)
- How to Maximize the Potential of FPGA-Based DSPs for Modular Exponentiation
- A Design Methodology for a DPA-Resistant Circuit with RSL Techniques
- How to Decide Selection Functions for Power Analysis : From the Viewpoint of Hardware Architecture of Block Ciphers
- Collusion Secure Codes : Systematic Security Definitions and Their Relations(Discrete Mathematics and Its Applications)
- Clone Match Rate Evaluation for an Artifact-metric System (特集:新たな脅威に立ち向かうコンピュータセキュリティ技術)
- Detection-Resistant Steganography for Standard MIDI Files (Information Security)
- An Evaluation Method of Time Stamping Schemes from Viewpoints of Integrity, Cost and Availability(Special Section on Cryptography and Information Security)
- An Artifact-metric System Which Utilizes Inherent Texture (特集 21世紀のコンピュータセキュリティ技術)
- Random-Error-Resilient Tracing Algorithm for a Collusion-Secure Fingerprinting Code (特集 電子社会に向けたコンピュータセキュリティ技術)
- A Flexible Tree-Based Key Management Framework(Special Section on Cryptography and Information Security)
- Information-Flow-Based Access Control for Web Browsers
- Multiparty DSA Signature Generation without Simultaneous User Operations(Application Information Security)
- Random-Error Resilience of a Short Collusion-Secure Code
- An Evaluation Method for a Magnetic Artifact-metric System (特集 電子社会に向けたコンピュータセキュリティ技術)
- A Scheme of Secret Communication Using Internet Control Message Protocol(Special Section on Cryptography and Information Security)
- On Applicability of Differential Cryptanalysis, Linear Cryptanalysis and Mod n Cryptanalysis to an Encryption Algorithm M8(ISO9979-20) (特集 21世紀のコンピュータセキュリティ技術)
- A proper security analysis method for CMOS cryptographic circuits
- Finding Malicious Authoritative DNS Servers