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Global wealth disparities drive adherence to COVID-safe pathways in head and neck cancer surgery
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Mandatory Human Participation: A New Scheme for Building Secure Systems
Mandatory Human Participation (MHP) is a novel authentication scheme that
asks the question "are you human?" (instead of "who are you?"), and upon
the correct answer to this question, can prove a principal to be a human
being instead of a computer program. MHP helps solve old and new problems
in computer security that existing security measures can not address
properly, including password (or PIN number) guessing attacks, automated
service and information theft, and
denial of service. A key component of this `are you human?'' authentication
process is a character morphing algorithm that transforms a character string
into its graphical form in such a way that a human being won't have any
problem recognizing the original string, while a computer program (e.g., an
Optical Character
Recognition program), will not be able to decipher it or make a correct
guess with non-negligible probability. The basic idea of the MHP scheme is
to ask an agent to recognize the string before its login attempts or
transaction requests can be honored. Here a protocol is needed to send a
puzzle to an agent, check if the answer supplied by the agent is correct,
and most importantly make sure that the agent can not cheat in the process.
A number of system and security issues that relate to the protocol need to
be addressed for the protocol to be secure, efficient, robust, and
user-friendly. The MHP scheme contributes to the foundation of the computer
security by faithfully implementing a novel security semantics, "human,"
which existing cryptographic measures can not express accurately. As many
real-world security applications involve the interaction between a human and
a
computer, which naturally contains "human" as a part of its protocol
semantics, we believe that the MHP scheme will find many new applications in
the future
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