| T. Okamoto, M. Tada, and E. Okamoto. Extended proxy signatures for smart cards. In LNCS, volume 1729 of LNCS. Springer-Verlag, 1999. |
....by Mambo, Usuda and Okamoto [19] Since then proxy signature schemes have enjoyed a considerable amount of interest from the cryptographic research community. New security considerations and constructions have been proposed, old schemes have been broken, followed by more constructions (e.g. [12, 34, 23, 31, 30, 35, 15, 8, 16, 32]) Furthermore, various extensions of the basic proxy signature primitive have been considered. These include threshold proxy signatures [12, 37, 28, 29, 10] blind proxy signatures [13] proxy signatures with warrant recovery [14] nominative proxy signatures [24] one time proxy signatures [11] ....
T. Okamoto, M. Tada, and E. Okamoto. Extended proxy signatures for smart cards. In LNCS, volume 1729 of LNCS. Springer-Verlag, 1999.
....The concept of proxy signature was first introduced by Mambo, Usuda, and Okamoto in 1996 [15] The proxy signature schemes allow proxy signers to sign messages on behalf of an original signer. After Mambo et al. s first scheme was announced, many proxy signature schemes have been proposed [10, 12, 16, 24]. Proxy signatures can combine other special signatures to obtain some new types of proxy signatures. Till now, there are various kinds of proxy signature schemes have been proposed [14, 22, 25] Proxy blind signature is an important type of proxy signature, it plays an important role in the ....
T. Okamoto, M. Tada and E. Okamoto, Extended proxy signatures for smart cards, ISW'99, LNCS 1729, Springer-Verlag, pp. 247-258, 1999.
....security attacks [6] at digital signing time or when verifying the e docs content and the signature(s) applied on them. The security features in AIDA have been widely described in [3] XML is appropriate to be used for the e doc s format in order to avoid security attacks [10] Smart cards [11, 12] are used for authentication and signing purposes, the securing of the communication channels is done by employing the SSL protocol and X.509 certificates are used also for access control. Also the trustworthy creation viewing of the signatures using WYSIWYS software has been carefully ....
Okamoto T., Tada M., Okamoto E., 1999. Extended Proxy Signatures for Smart Cards, Proceedings of Information Security Conference, vol. 1729 of LNCS, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, pp. 247-258
No context found.
T. Okamoto, M. Tada, and E. Okamoto. Extended proxy signatures for smart cards. In LNCS, volume 1729 of LNCS. Springer-Verlag, 1999.
No context found.
T. Okamoto, M. Tada, and E. Okamoto. Extended proxy signatures for smart cards. In: Information Security Workshop (ISW'99), LNCS 1729, pp. 247-258. Springer-Verlag, 1999.
No context found.
T. Okamoto, M. Tada and E. Okamoto, Extended proxy signatures for smart cards, ISW'99, LNCS 1729, Springer-Verlag, pp. 247-258, 1999.
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