6,868 research outputs found
Algebraic Attack on the Alternating Step(r,s)Generator
The Alternating Step(r,s) Generator, ASG(r,s), is a clock-controlled sequence
generator which is recently proposed by A. Kanso. It consists of three
registers of length l, m and n bits. The first register controls the clocking
of the two others. The two other registers are clocked r times (or not clocked)
(resp. s times or not clocked) depending on the clock-control bit in the first
register. The special case r=s=1 is the original and well known Alternating
Step Generator. Kanso claims there is no efficient attack against the ASG(r,s)
since r and s are kept secret. In this paper, we present an Alternating Step
Generator, ASG, model for the ASG(r,s) and also we present a new and efficient
algebraic attack on ASG(r,s) using 3(m+n) bits of the output sequence to find
the secret key with O((m^2+n^2)*2^{l+1}+ (2^{m-1})*m^3 + (2^{n-1})*n^3)
computational complexity. We show that this system is no more secure than the
original ASG, in contrast to the claim of the ASG(r,s)'s constructor.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures, 2 tables, 2010 IEEE International Symposium on
Information Theory (ISIT2010),June 13-18, 2010, Austin, Texa
Fast, uniform, and compact scalar multiplication for elliptic curves and genus 2 Jacobians with applications to signature schemes
We give a general framework for uniform, constant-time one-and
two-dimensional scalar multiplication algorithms for elliptic curves and
Jacobians of genus 2 curves that operate by projecting to the x-line or Kummer
surface, where we can exploit faster and more uniform pseudomultiplication,
before recovering the proper "signed" output back on the curve or Jacobian.
This extends the work of L{\'o}pez and Dahab, Okeya and Sakurai, and Brier and
Joye to genus 2, and also to two-dimensional scalar multiplication. Our results
show that many existing fast pseudomultiplication implementations (hitherto
limited to applications in Diffie--Hellman key exchange) can be wrapped with
simple and efficient pre-and post-computations to yield competitive full scalar
multiplication algorithms, ready for use in more general discrete
logarithm-based cryptosystems, including signature schemes. This is especially
interesting for genus 2, where Kummer surfaces can outperform comparable
elliptic curve systems. As an example, we construct an instance of the Schnorr
signature scheme driven by Kummer surface arithmetic
Modelling and simulation of a biometric identity-based cryptography
Government information is a vital asset that must be kept in a trusted environment and efficiently managed by authorised parties. Even though e-Government provides a number of advantages, it also introduces a range of new security risks. Sharing confidential and top-secret information in a secure manner among government sectors tend to be the main element that government agencies look for. Thus, developing an effective methodology is essential and it is a key factor for e-Government success. The proposed e-Government scheme in this paper is a combination of identity-based encryption and biometric technology. This new scheme can effectively improve the security in authentication systems, which provides a reliable identity with a high degree of assurance. In addition, this paper demonstrates the feasibility of using Finite-state machines as a formal method to analyse the proposed protocols
Faculty Fellows 2017-2018
This document provides biographies of PLACE faculty fellows at Linfield College for 2017-2018
Can NSEC5 be practical for DNSSEC deployments?
NSEC5 is proposed modification to DNSSEC that simultaneously guarantees two security properties: (1) privacy against offline zone enumeration, and (2) integrity of zone contents, even if an adversary compromises the authoritative nameserver responsible for responding to DNS queries for the zone. This paper redesigns NSEC5 to make it both practical and performant. Our NSEC5 redesign features a new fast verifiable random function (VRF) based on elliptic curve cryptography (ECC), along with a cryptographic proof of its security. This VRF is also of independent interest, as it is being standardized by the IETF and being used by several other projects. We show how to integrate NSEC5 using our ECC-based VRF into the DNSSEC protocol, leveraging precomputation to improve performance and DNS protocol-level optimizations to shorten responses. Next, we present the first full-fledged implementation of NSEC5—extending widely-used DNS software to present a nameserver and recursive resolver that support NSEC5—and evaluate their performance under aggressive DNS query loads. Our performance results
indicate that our redesigned NSEC5 can be viable even for high-throughput scenarioshttps://eprint.iacr.org/2017/099.pdfFirst author draf
Biometric identity-based cryptography for e-Government environment
Government information is a vital asset that must be kept in a trusted environment and efficiently managed by authorised parties. Even though e-Government provides a number of advantages, it also introduces a range of new security risks. Sharing confidential and top-secret information in a secure manner among government sectors tend to be the main element that government agencies look for. Thus, developing an effective methodology is essential and it is a key factor for e-Government success. The proposed e-Government scheme in this paper is a combination of identity-based encryption and biometric technology. This new scheme can effectively improve the security in authentication systems, which provides a reliable identity with a high degree of assurance. In addition, this paper demonstrates the feasibility of using Finite-state machines as a formal method to analyse the proposed protocols
Fast Quantum Algorithm for Solving Multivariate Quadratic Equations
In August 2015 the cryptographic world was shaken by a sudden and surprising
announcement by the US National Security Agency NSA concerning plans to
transition to post-quantum algorithms. Since this announcement post-quantum
cryptography has become a topic of primary interest for several standardization
bodies. The transition from the currently deployed public-key algorithms to
post-quantum algorithms has been found to be challenging in many aspects. In
particular the problem of evaluating the quantum-bit security of such
post-quantum cryptosystems remains vastly open. Of course this question is of
primarily concern in the process of standardizing the post-quantum
cryptosystems. In this paper we consider the quantum security of the problem of
solving a system of {\it Boolean multivariate quadratic equations in
variables} (\MQb); a central problem in post-quantum cryptography. When ,
under a natural algebraic assumption, we present a Las-Vegas quantum algorithm
solving \MQb{} that requires the evaluation of, on average,
quantum gates. To our knowledge this is the fastest algorithm for solving
\MQb{}
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