29 research outputs found

    Secure Chaotic Maps-based Group Key Agreement Scheme with Privacy Preserving

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    Abstract Nowadays chaos theory related to cryptography has been addressed widely, so there is an intuitive connection between group key agreement and chaotic maps. Such a connector may lead to a novel way to construct authenticated and efficient group key agreement protocols. Many chaotic maps based two-party/three-party password authenticated key agreement (2PAKA/3PAKA) schemes have been proposed. However, to the best of our knowledge, no chaotic maps based group (N-party) key agreement protocol without using a timestamp and password has been proposed yet. In this paper, we propose the first chaotic maps-based group authentication key agreement protocol. The proposed protocol is based on chaotic maps to create a kind of signcryption method to transmit authenticated information and make the calculated consumption and communicating round restrict to an acceptable bound. At the same time our proposed protocol can achieve members' revocation or join easily, which not only refrains from consuming modular exponential computing and scalar multiplication on an elliptic curve, but is also robust to resist various attacks and achieves perfect forward secrecy with privacy preserving

    Privacy protection for e-health systems by means of dynamic authentication and three-factor key agreement

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    During the past decade, the electronic healthcare (e-health) system has been evolved into a more patient-oriented service with smaller and smarter wireless devices. However, these convenient smart devices have limited computing capacity and memory size, which makes it harder to protect the user’s massive private data in the e-health system. Although some works have established a secure session key between the user and the medical server, the weaknesses still exist in preserving the anonymity with low energy consumption. Moreover, the misuse of biometric information in key agreement process may lead to privacy disclosure, which is irreparable. In this study, we design a dynamic privacy protection mechanism offering the biometric authentication at the server side whereas the exact value of the biometric template remains unknown to the server. And the user anonymity can be fully preserved during the authentication and key negotiation process because the messages transmitted with the proposed scheme are untraceable. Furthermore, the proposed scheme is proved to be semantic secure under the Real-or-Random Model. The performance analysis shows that the proposed scheme suits the e-health environment at the aspect of security and resource occupation

    An Anonymous Authenticated Key Agreement Protocol Secure in Partially Trusted Registration Server Scenario for Multi-Server Architectures

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    The accelerated advances in information communication technologies have made it possible for enterprises to deploy large scale applications in a multi-server architecture (also known as cloud computing environment). In this architecture, a mobile user can remotely obtain desired services over the Internet from multiple servers by initially executing a single registration on a trusted registration server (RS). Due to the hazardous nature of the Internet, to protect user privacy and online communication, a lot of multi-server authenticated-key-agreement (MSAKA) schemes have been furnished. However, all such designs lack in two very vital aspects, i.e., 1) no security under the partially trusted RS and 2) RS cannot control a user to access only a wanted combination of service-providing servers. To address these shortcomings, we present a new MSAKA protocol using self-certified public-key cryptography (SCPKC). We confirm the security of the proposed scheme by utilizing the well-known automated verification tool AVISPA and also provide a formal security proof in the random oracle model. Moreover, the software implementation of the proposed scheme, and a performance and security metrics comparison shows that it portrays a better security performance trade-off, and hence is more appropriate for real-life applications having resource constraint devices

    Authentication Protocols for Internet of Things: A Comprehensive Survey

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    In this paper, a comprehensive survey of authentication protocols for Internet of Things (IoT) is presented. Specifically more than forty authentication protocols developed for or applied in the context of the IoT are selected and examined in detail. These protocols are categorized based on the target environment: (1) Machine to Machine Communications (M2M), (2) Internet of Vehicles (IoV), (3) Internet of Energy (IoE), and (4) Internet of Sensors (IoS). Threat models, countermeasures, and formal security verification techniques used in authentication protocols for the IoT are presented. In addition a taxonomy and comparison of authentication protocols that are developed for the IoT in terms of network model, specific security goals, main processes, computation complexity, and communication overhead are provided. Based on the current survey, open issues are identified and future research directions are proposed

    Securing fog computing with a decentralised user authentication approach based on blockchain

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    The use of low-cost sensors in IoT over high-cost devices has been considered less expensive. However, these low-cost sensors have their own limitations such as the accuracy, quality, and reliability of the data collected. Fog computing offers solutions to those limitations; nevertheless, owning to its intrinsic distributed architecture, it faces challenges in the form of security of fog devices, secure authentication and privacy. Blockchain technology has been utilised to offer solutions for the authentication and security challenges in fog systems. This paper proposes an authentication system that utilises the characteristics and advantages of blockchain and smart contracts to authenticate users securely. The implemented system uses the email address, username, Ethereum address, password and data from a biometric reader to register and authenticate users. Experiments showed that the proposed method is secure and achieved performance improvement when compared to existing methods. The comparison of results with state-of-the-art showed that the proposed authentication system consumed up to 30% fewer resources in transaction and execution cost; however, there was an increase of up to 30% in miner fees

    On the Design of a Secure Proxy Signature-based Handover Authentication Scheme for LTEWireless Networks

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    Designing a secure and efficient handover authentication scheme has always been a concern of cellular networks especially in 4G Long Term Evolution (LTE) wireless networks. What makes their handover so complex, is the presence of different types of base stations namely eNodeB (eNB) and Home eNodeB (HeNB). In addition, they cannot directly communicate with each other. Recently, an efficient proxy signature-based handover authentication scheme has been suggested by Qui et al. Despite its better performance and security advantages than previous schemes, it suffers serious vulnerabilities, namely being prone to DoS attack , eNB impersonation attack and lack of perfect forward secrecy. In this paper, we propose an improved handover authentication scheme in LTE wireless networks that resists against such attacks. Further, we validate the security of the proposed scheme using Real-Or- Random (ROR) model and ProVerif analysis tool. The results confirm our security claims of the proposed scheme. In addition, the performance analysis shows that compared to other schemes, our proposed scheme is more efficient

    Lightweight identity based online/offline signature scheme for wireless sensor networks

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    Data security is one of the issues during data exchange between two sensor nodes in wireless sensor networks (WSN). While information flows across naturally exposed communication channels, cybercriminals may access sensitive information. Multiple traditional reliable encryption methods like RSA encryption-decryption and Diffie–Hellman key exchange face a crisis of computational resources due to limited storage, low computational ability, and insufficient power in lightweight WSNs. The complexity of these security mechanisms reduces the network lifespan, and an online/offline strategy is one way to overcome this problem. This study proposed an improved identity-based online/offline signature scheme using Elliptic Curve Cryptography (ECC) encryption. The lightweight calculations were conducted during the online phase, and in the offline phase, the encryption, point multiplication, and other heavy measures were pre-processed using powerful devices. The proposed scheme uniquely combined the Inverse Collusion Attack Algorithm (CAA) with lightweight ECC to generate secure identitybased signatures. The suggested scheme was analyzed for security and success probability under Random Oracle Model (ROM). The analysis concluded that the generated signatures were immune to even the worst Chosen Message Attack. The most important, resource-effective, and extensively used on-demand function was the verification of the signatures. The low-cost verification algorithm of the scheme saved a significant number of valued resources and increased the overall network’s lifespan. The results for encryption/decryption time, computation difficulty, and key generation time for various data sizes showed the proposed solution was ideal for lightweight devices as it accelerated data transmission speed and consumed the least resources. The hybrid method obtained an average of 66.77% less time consumption and up to 12% lower computational cost than previous schemes like the dynamic IDB-ECC two-factor authentication key exchange protocol, lightweight IBE scheme (IDB-Lite), and Korean certification-based signature standard using the ECC. The proposed scheme had a smaller key size and signature size of 160 bits. Overall, the energy consumption was also reduced to 0.53 mJ for 1312 bits of offline storage. The hybrid framework of identity-based signatures, online/offline phases, ECC, CAA, and low-cost algorithms enhances overall performance by having less complexity, time, and memory consumption. Thus, the proposed hybrid scheme is ideally suited for a lightweight WSN
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