6,284 research outputs found
Linear Codes from Some 2-Designs
A classical method of constructing a linear code over \gf(q) with a
-design is to use the incidence matrix of the -design as a generator
matrix over \gf(q) of the code. This approach has been extensively
investigated in the literature. In this paper, a different method of
constructing linear codes using specific classes of -designs is studied, and
linear codes with a few weights are obtained from almost difference sets,
difference sets, and a type of -designs associated to semibent functions.
Two families of the codes obtained in this paper are optimal. The linear codes
presented in this paper have applications in secret sharing and authentication
schemes, in addition to their applications in consumer electronics,
communication and data storage systems. A coding-theory approach to the
characterisation of highly nonlinear Boolean functions is presented
KLEIN: A New Family of Lightweight Block Ciphers
Resource-efficient cryptographic primitives become fundamental for realizing both security and efficiency in embedded systems like RFID tags and sensor nodes. Among those primitives, lightweight block cipher plays a major role as a building block for security protocols. In this paper, we describe a new family of lightweight block ciphers named KLEIN, which is designed for resource-constrained devices such as wireless sensors and RFID tags. Compared to the related proposals, KLEIN has advantage in the software performance on legacy sensor platforms, while in the same time its hardware implementation can also be compact
On the Duality of Probing and Fault Attacks
In this work we investigate the problem of simultaneous privacy and integrity
protection in cryptographic circuits. We consider a white-box scenario with a
powerful, yet limited attacker. A concise metric for the level of probing and
fault security is introduced, which is directly related to the capabilities of
a realistic attacker. In order to investigate the interrelation of probing and
fault security we introduce a common mathematical framework based on the
formalism of information and coding theory. The framework unifies the known
linear masking schemes. We proof a central theorem about the properties of
linear codes which leads to optimal secret sharing schemes. These schemes
provide the lower bound for the number of masks needed to counteract an
attacker with a given strength. The new formalism reveals an intriguing duality
principle between the problems of probing and fault security, and provides a
unified view on privacy and integrity protection using error detecting codes.
Finally, we introduce a new class of linear tamper-resistant codes. These are
eligible to preserve security against an attacker mounting simultaneous probing
and fault attacks
A Smart Approach for GPT Cryptosystem Based on Rank Codes
The concept of Public- key cryptosystem was innovated by McEliece's
cryptosystem. The public key cryptosystem based on rank codes was presented in
1991 by Gabidulin -Paramonov-Trejtakov(GPT). The use of rank codes in
cryptographic applications is advantageous since it is practically impossible
to utilize combinatoric decoding. This has enabled using public keys of a
smaller size. Respective structural attacks against this system were proposed
by Gibson and recently by Overbeck. Overbeck's attacks break many versions of
the GPT cryptosystem and are turned out to be either polynomial or exponential
depending on parameters of the cryptosystem. In this paper, we introduce a new
approach, called the Smart approach, which is based on a proper choice of the
distortion matrix X. The Smart approach allows for withstanding all known
attacks even if the column scrambler matrix P over the base field Fq.Comment: 5 pages. to appear in Proceedings of IEEE ISIT201
Quantum authentication with key recycling
We show that a family of quantum authentication protocols introduced in
[Barnum et al., FOCS 2002] can be used to construct a secure quantum channel
and additionally recycle all of the secret key if the message is successfully
authenticated, and recycle part of the key if tampering is detected. We give a
full security proof that constructs the secure channel given only insecure
noisy channels and a shared secret key. We also prove that the number of
recycled key bits is optimal for this family of protocols, i.e., there exists
an adversarial strategy to obtain all non-recycled bits. Previous works
recycled less key and only gave partial security proofs, since they did not
consider all possible distinguishers (environments) that may be used to
distinguish the real setting from the ideal secure quantum channel and secret
key resource.Comment: 38+17 pages, 13 figures. v2: constructed ideal secure channel and
secret key resource have been slightly redefined; also added a proof in the
appendix for quantum authentication without key recycling that has better
parameters and only requires weak purity testing code
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