119 research outputs found
ID-based Ring Signature and Proxy Ring Signature Schemes from Bilinear Pairings
In 2001, Rivest et al. firstly introduced the concept of ring signatures. A
ring signature is a simplified group signature without any manager. It protects
the anonymity of a signer. The first scheme proposed by Rivest et al. was based
on RSA cryptosystem and certificate based public key setting. The first ring
signature scheme based on DLP was proposed by Abe, Ohkubo, and Suzuki. Their
scheme is also based on the general certificate-based public key setting too.
In 2002, Zhang and Kim proposed a new ID-based ring signature scheme using
pairings. Later Lin and Wu proposed a more efficient ID-based ring signature
scheme. Both these schemes have some inconsistency in computational aspect.
In this paper we propose a new ID-based ring signature scheme and a proxy
ring signature scheme. Both the schemes are more efficient than existing one.
These schemes also take care of the inconsistencies in above two schemes.Comment: Published with ePrint Archiv
Proxy Blind Signature Scheme
Blind signature is the concept to ensure anonymity of e-coins. Untracebility and unlinkability are two main properties of real coins, which require mimicking electronically. Whenever a user is
permitted to spend an e-coin, he is in need to fulfill above requirements of blind signature. This paper proposes a proxy blind signature scheme with which a proxy is able to make proxy blind
signature which verifier is able to verify in a way similar to proxy signature schemes
Security Analysis of A Dynamic ID-based Remote User Authentication Scheme
Since 1981, when Lamport introduced the remote user authentication scheme using table, a plenty of schemes had been proposed with table and without table using. Recently Das, Saxena and Gulati have proposed A dynamic ID-based remote user authentication scheme. They claimed that their scheme is secure against ID-theft, and can resist the reply attacks, forgery attacks, and insider attacks and so on.
In this paper we show that Das et al.’s scheme is completely insecure and using of this scheme is equivalent to an open server access without any password
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