| D. Kahn, The Codebreakers, The MacMillan Company, 1967. |
....attacks on smartcards. Electromagnetic radiation [33, 16, 34] compromising emanations [36] crosstalk onto the power line [37, 35] return signals obtained by illuminating electronic equipment [3, 35] magnetic fields [32] cache hit ratios [24, 30] and even sounds given off by rotor machines [23] can similarly give the attacker a window of visibility on internal values calculated during the computation. Also of interest is the probing attack, where the attacker places a metal needle on a wire of interest and reads off the value carried along that wire during the smartcard s computation ....
D. Kahn, The Codebreakers, The MacMillan Company, 1967.
....on task rescheduling techniques and architectures. The HMS project, in which the authors are participating, contributes to the international research programme [7] on Intelligent Manufacturing Systems (IMS) The building blocks of a HMS are holons. The term holon was first introduced by Koestler [32] and comes from the Greek word holos (signifying whole) with a suffix on (a particle, as in proton or neutron) Holons provide all the facilities needed to control, transport, transform and store parts within a factory. Holons can also process information such as being a server or expert system. ....
A. Koestler. The Ghost in the Machine. The Macmillan Company, August 1968.
....with side channels in mind; hence, they are often very vulnerable to analysis using them. It is our belief that most operational cryptanalysis makes use of side channel information. Sound as a side channel listening to the rotation of electromechanical rotor machines was alluded to in Kahn [Kah67]. Van Eck radiation another side channel has been demonstrated as a way to get plaintext [vEc85] And Peter Wright discussed data leaking onto a transmission line as a side channel used to break a French cryptographic device [Wri87] The (unclassi ed) military literature provides many examples ....
D. Kahn, The Codebreakers, The MacMillan Company, 1967.
....with side channels in mind; hence, they are often very vulnerable to analysis using them. It is our belief that most operational cryptanalysis makes use of side channel information. Sound as a side channel listening to the rotation of electromechanical rotor machines was alluded to in Kahn [Kah67]. Van Eck radiation another side channel has been demonstrated as a way to get plaintext [vEc85] And Peter Wright discussed data leaking onto a transmission line as a side channel used to break a French cryptographic device [Wri87] Using side channels to break cryptographic primitives is ....
D. Kahn, The Codebreakers, The MacMillan Company, 1967.
....with side channels in mind; hence, they are often very vulnerable to analysis using them. It is our belief that most operational cryptanalysis makes use of side channel information. Sound as a side channel listening to the rotation of electromechanical rotor machines was alluded to in Kahn [Kah67]. Van Eck radiation another side channel has been demonstrated as a way to get plaintext [vEc85] And Peter Wright discussed data leaking onto a transmission line as a side channel used to break a French cryptographic device [Wri87] The (unclassified) military literature provides many ....
D. Kahn, The Codebreakers, The MacMillan Company, 1967.
....are rules that you must always obey and rules that you may break once in a while. There are stylistic conventions to learn and follow. As with writing prose, programs, and mathematics, writing specifications well takes practice and patience. There are many books on how to write good prose (e.g. [18]) and even some on how to write good programs (e.g. 3] This paper is my attempt, and perhaps the first such attempt in the formal methods community, to cull out some common rules of thumb for writing specifications. Maybe these hints can serve eventually as a basis for a set of organized ....
W. Strunk and E.B.White. The Elements of Style. The Macmillan Company, 1972. second edition.
....to the cyclic subgroup generated by z, and the order of z 1 (resp. z 2 ) is prime to p (resp. is a power of p) Clearly T is a maximal subgroup of the soluble group B = B G of order prime to p 10 (recall that B = TU , a semi direct product) so it follows from the P. Hall Theorem (cf. [H], x9.3) that t = gz 1 g Gamma1 2 T for a suitable g 2 U: We have t = z 1 (z Gamma1 1 gz 1 g Gamma1 ) zz Gamma1 2 (z Gamma1 1 gz 1 g Gamma1 ) y[vz Gamma1 2 (z Gamma1 1 gz 1 g Gamma1 ) Since U is a normal Sylow p subgroup of B, the expression in the square ....
M. Hall, The Theory of Groups, The Macmillan Company, New York, 1959
....wherever possible, omit the type information and introduce an additional notational convention by writing variables in capital letters and constants in small letters. We formalize the theorem that definitions 1 and 2 are equivalent straightforward as 1 The complete informal proof is stated in [Hal59] together with a variety of other definitions for the concept of group. T: 8G [9Op 1 group 1(G; Op 1 ) 9Op 2 group 2(G; Op 2 ) were group 1 and group 2 are abbreviations for the actual definitions of the groups. The definitions themselves are represented as abstractions and associated to ....
M. Hall. The Theory of Groups. The Macmillan Company, New York, USA, 1959.
....with side channels in mind; hence, they are often very vulnerable to analysis using them. It is our belief that most operational cryptanalysis makes use of side channel information. Sound as a side channel listening to the rotation of electromechanical rotor machines was alluded to in Kahn [Kah67]. van Eck radiation another side channel has been demonstrated as a way to get plaintext [vEc85] And Peter Wright discussed data leaking onto a transmission line as a side channel to break a French cryptographic device [Wri87] The use of side channels to break cryptographic primitives is ....
D. Kahn, The Codebreakers, The MacMillan Company, 1967.
No context found.
D. Kahn, The Codebreakers, The MacMillan Company, 1967.
No context found.
D. Kahn, The Codebreakers, The MacMillan Company, 1967.
No context found.
Kahn, D., The Codebreakers, MacMillan Company, 1967.
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