| R. Ganesan. Yaksha: Augmenting Kerberos with public key cryptography. In Proc. 1995. |
....Schnorr and GQ, they are hardly the first schemes to interoperate with standard one party algorithms. Bellare and Sanhdu [6] and MacKenzie and Reiter [26] consider several flavors of two party generation of the RSA (full domain hash) signatures (building on some previous less formal work, e.g. [10, 18]) The schemes are simple, elegant, and in most cases reducible to the basic RSA assumption. MacKenzie and Reiter [27] also give a protocol for two party generation of DSA signatures [16] Two party signatures can also be viewed as a special case of general secure two party computation [36] ....
R. Ganesan. Yaksha: Augmenting kerberos with public-key cryptography. In Proceedings of the ISOC Network and Distributed Systems Security Symposium, pages 132--143, 1995.
....required to prove security, vary from protocol to protocol in a perhaps surprising way. Motivation. This work is motivated by recent practical interest in two party RSA signature schemes. Several companies are working on products that enable server aided password based cryptography. Ganesan [12] had suggested that d c be based on a client password. The server could be implemented via a smartcard, or be a device on the network as in [25] 3 Why all these protocols In developing protocols based on Equation (2) practitioners are likely to explore variations based on bene ts they bring ....
R. Ganesan. Yaksha: Augmenting Kerberos with public-key cryptography. Proceedings of the ISOC Network and Distributed Systems Security Symposium, 1995.
....present goal. Omega Gammao architecture differs from those of the key distribution services in the Digital Distributed System Security Architecture and its derivatives [11, 32, 19] the CCITT X. 509 recommendation [15] Privacy Enhanced Mail [16] and the Yaksha public key extension to Kerberos [10]. In their simplest form, these services consist of an off line certification authority that creates public key certificates, and an on line directory that distributes these certificates to clients. In contrast, Omega is on line and thus can provide more timely service to clients (e.g. can create ....
R. Ganesan. Yaksha: Augmenting Kerberos with public key cryptography. In Proceedings of the 1995 Internet Society Symposium on Network and Distributed System Security, pages 132--143, Feb. 1995.
....by all principals. Work is currently going on at the MIT, to extend Kerberos for authentication over secondary networks (Atkins, 1993) and to use Kerberos to set up a PGP server in a corporate environment (Schiller and Atkins, 1995) Recently, a variant of Kerberos V5 was proposed as Yaksha (Ganesan, 1995). Yaksha uses as its building block a generalization of the RSA cryptosystem. The user s private key is split into two parts; one part is becoming the user s password, and the other part the AS password for that particular user. Together, the user and the AS can digitally sign messages. 3 NETSP ....
Ganesan, R. (1995) Yaksha: Augmenting Kerberos with Public Key Cryptography. In Proceedings of the Internet Society Symposium on Network and Distributed System Security, 132-43.
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R. Ganesan. Yaksha: Augmenting Kerberos with public key cryptography. In Proc. 1995.
No context found.
R. Ganesan. Yaksha: Augmenting Kerberos with public-key cryptography. Proceedings of the ISOC Network and Distributed Systems Security Symposium, 1995.
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R. Ganesan. Yaksha: Augmenting Kerberos with Public Key Cryptography. NDSS'95.
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R. Ganesan. Yaksha: Augmenting Kerberos with public key cryptography. In Proceedings of the 1995 ISOC Network and Distributed System Security Symposium, February 1995
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R. Ganesan. Yaksha: Augmenting Kerberos with public key cryptography. In Proceedings of the 1995.
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Ganesan R (1995) Yaksha: augmenting Kerberos with public key cryptography. In: Proceedings of the 1995 ISOC network and distributed system security symposium, San Diego, February 1995, pp 132--143
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Ganesan, R., "Yaksha: Augmenting Kerberos with Public Key Cryptography", Proceedings of the Symposium on Network and Distributed System Security, Februrary 1995, pp. 132-143.
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R. Ganesan. Yaksha: Augmenting kerberos with public-key cryptography, 1995.
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R. Ganesan. Yaksha: Augmenting kerberos with public-key cryptography, 1995.
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