| National Institute of Technology and Standards: Specifications for the Digital Signature Standard (DSS), Federal Information Processing Standards Publication, US. Department of Commerce, 1993. |
....(for a generalization, see [9] Though yielding shorter signatures asymptotically, the size grows rapidly in practice as the number of signatures made increases. Starting with [2] many practical digital signature schemes have been proposed, for instance, 15] 16] 17] 18] 19] 20] and [21]. Although many of them are actually used in practice today, these schemes seem to have the property that their security is hard to analyze. We certainly do not mean to suggest here that their security is dubious. On the contrary, these schemes rely on common cryptographic assumptions, such as the ....
National Institute of Technology and Standards: Specifications for the Digital Signature Standard (DSS), Federal Information Processing Standards Publication, US. Department of Commerce, 1993.
....made increases. Starting with the seminal paper [22] which proposed the RSA functions as the first implementation of public key cryptography as envisaged by Diffie and Hellman [9] many practical digital signature schemes have been proposed, for instance, 11] 12] 24] 14] 20] 16] and [19]. Although many of them are actually used in practice today, these schemes seem to have the property that their security is hard to analyze. We certainly do not mean to suggest here that their security is dubious. On the contrary, these schemes rely on common cryptographic assumptions, such as the ....
National Institute of Technology and Standards: Specifications for the Digital Signature Standard (DSS), Federal Information Processing Standards Publication, US. Department of Commerce, 1993.
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