858 research outputs found
Cryptanalysis and improvement of password-authenticated key agreement for session initiation protocol using smart cards
Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) is one of the most commonly used protocols for handling sessions for Voice over Internet Protocol (VoIP)-based communications, and the security of SIP is becoming increasingly important. Recently, Zhang et al. proposed a password authenticated key agreement protocol for SIP by using smart cards to protect the VoIP communications between users. Their protocol provided some unique features, such as mutual authentication, no password table needed, and password updating freely. In this study, we performed cryptanalysis of Zhang et al.'s protocol and found that their protocol was vulnerable to the impersonation attack although the protocol could withstand several other attacks. A malicious attacker could compute other users’ privacy keys and then impersonated the users to cheat the SIP server. Furthermore, we proposed an improved password authentication key agreement protocol for SIP, which overcame the weakness of Zhang et al.’s protocol and was more suitable for VoIP communications
On the Relations Between Diffie-Hellman and ID-Based Key Agreement from Pairings
This paper studies the relationships between the traditional Diffie-Hellman
key agreement protocol and the identity-based (ID-based) key agreement protocol
from pairings.
For the Sakai-Ohgishi-Kasahara (SOK) ID-based key construction, we show that
identical to the Diffie-Hellman protocol, the SOK key agreement protocol also
has three variants, namely \emph{ephemeral}, \emph{semi-static} and
\emph{static} versions. Upon this, we build solid relations between
authenticated Diffie-Hellman (Auth-DH) protocols and ID-based authenticated key
agreement (IB-AK) protocols, whereby we present two \emph{substitution rules}
for this two types of protocols. The rules enable a conversion between the two
types of protocols. In particular, we obtain the \emph{real} ID-based version
of the well-known MQV (and HMQV) protocol.
Similarly, for the Sakai-Kasahara (SK) key construction, we show that the key
transport protocol underlining the SK ID-based encryption scheme (which we call
the "SK protocol") has its non-ID counterpart, namely the Hughes protocol.
Based on this observation, we establish relations between corresponding
ID-based and non-ID-based protocols. In particular, we propose a highly
enhanced version of the McCullagh-Barreto protocol
An Elliptic Curve-based Signcryption Scheme with Forward Secrecy
An elliptic curve-based signcryption scheme is introduced in this paper that
effectively combines the functionalities of digital signature and encryption,
and decreases the computational costs and communication overheads in comparison
with the traditional signature-then-encryption schemes. It simultaneously
provides the attributes of message confidentiality, authentication, integrity,
unforgeability, non-repudiation, public verifiability, and forward secrecy of
message confidentiality. Since it is based on elliptic curves and can use any
fast and secure symmetric algorithm for encrypting messages, it has great
advantages to be used for security establishments in store-and-forward
applications and when dealing with resource-constrained devices.Comment: 13 Pages, 5 Figures, 2 Table
Quantum e-commerce: A comparative study of possible protocols for online shopping and other tasks related to e-commerce
A set of quantum protocols for online shopping is proposed and analyzed to
establish that it is possible to perform secure online shopping using different
types of quantum resources. Specifically, a single photon based, a Bell state
based and two 3-qubit entangled state based quantum online shopping schemes are
proposed. The Bell state based scheme, being a completely orthogonal state
based protocol, is fundamentally different from the earlier proposed schemes
which were based on conjugate coding. One of the 3-qubit entangled state based
scheme is build on the principle of entanglement swapping which enables us to
accomplish the task without transmission of the message encoded qubits through
the channel. Possible ways of generalizing the entangled state based schemes
proposed here to the schemes which use multiqubit entangled states is also
discussed. Further, all the proposed protocols are shown to be free from the
limitations of the recently proposed protocol of Huang et al. (Quantum Inf.
Process. 14, 2211-2225, 2015) which allows the buyer (Alice) to change her
order at a later time (after initially placing the order and getting it
authenticated by the controller). The proposed schemes are also compared with
the existing schemes using qubit efficiency.Comment: It's shown that quantum e-commerce is not a difficult task, and it
can be done in various way
Privacy protection for telecare medicine information systems using a chaotic map-based three-factor authenticated key agreement scheme
Telecare Medicine Information Systems (TMIS) provides flexible and convenient e-health care. However the medical records transmitted in TMIS are exposed to unsecured public networks, so TMIS are more vulnerable to various types of security threats and attacks. To provide privacy protection for TMIS, a secure and efficient authenticated key agreement scheme is urgently needed to protect the sensitive medical data. Recently, Mishra et al. proposed a biometrics-based authenticated key agreement scheme for TMIS by using hash function and nonce, they claimed that their scheme could eliminate the security weaknesses of Yan et al.’s scheme and provide dynamic identity protection and user anonymity. In this paper, however, we demonstrate that Mishra et al.’s scheme suffers from replay attacks, man-in-the-middle attacks and fails to provide perfect forward secrecy. To overcome the weaknesses of Mishra et al.’s scheme, we then propose a three-factor authenticated key agreement scheme to enable the patient enjoy the remote healthcare services via TMIS with privacy protection. The chaotic map-based cryptography is employed in the proposed scheme to achieve a delicate balance of security and performance. Security analysis demonstrates that the proposed scheme resists various attacks and provides several attractive security properties. Performance evaluation shows that the proposed scheme increases efficiency in comparison with other related schemes
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