(Enter summary)
Abstract: . Classical cryptographic protocols based on shared secret keys
often are vulnerable to key-guessing attacks. For security, the keys must
be strong, difficult to memorize for humans. Bellovin and Merritt [4]
proposed "encrypted key exchange" (EKE) protocols, to frustrate keyguessing
attacks. EKE requires the use of asymmetric cryptosystems and
is based on encrypting the public key, using a symmetric cipher.
In this paper, a novel way of key exchange is presented, where public
keys are sent... (Update)
Cited by: More
Spelling-Error Tolerant, Order-Independent.. - Damerau-Levenshtein..
(Correct)
Session-Key Generation Using Human Passwords Only - Goldreich, Lindell (2005)
(Correct)
On the Security of Some Password-Based Key Agreement Schemes - Tang, Mitchell (2005)
(Correct)
Active bibliography (related documents): More All
0.5: Number Theoretic Attacks On Secure Password Schemes - Patel (1997)
(Correct)
0.1: On the Counting of Fully Packed Loop Configurations: Some New.. - Zuber (2004)
(Correct)
0.1: Electron Correlation and Jahn-Teller Interaction in Manganese .. - Nagaosa, Murakami
(Correct)
Similar documents based on text: More All
0.9: Three-Party Encrypted Key Exchange without Server Public-Keys - Lin, Sun, Steiner, Hwang (2001)
(Correct)
0.3: Refinement and Extension of Encrypted Key Exchange - Steiner, Tsudik, Waidner (1995)
(Correct)
0.3: Augmented Encrypted Key Exchange: a Password-Based Protocol.. - Bellovin, Merritt (1993)
(Correct)
Related documents from co-citation: More All
42: Encrypted Key Exchange: Password-Based Protocols Secure Against Dictionary Attac..
- Bellovin, Merritt - 1992
37: Strong password-only authenticated key exchange
- Jablon - 1996
32: Protecting Poorly Chosen Secrets from Guessing Attacks
- Gong, Lomas et al. - 1993
BibTeX entry: (Update)
S. Lucks, "Open Key Exchange: How to Defeat Dictionary Attacks Without Encrypting Public Keys", The Security Protocol Workshop '97, Ecole Normale Superieure, April 7-9, 1997. http://citeseer.ist.psu.edu/lucks97open.html More
@inproceedings{ luckslucksopen,
author = "Stefan Lucks",
title = "Open Key Exchange: How to Defeat Dictionary Attacks without Encrypting Public Keys",
pages = "79--90",
url = "citeseer.ist.psu.edu/lucks97open.html" }
Citations (may not include all citations):
704
Applied Cryptography (context) - Schneier - 1996
659
Random Oracles are Practical: A Paradigm for Designing Effic..
- Bellare, Rogaway - 1993
188
Entity Authentication and Key Distribution (context) - Bellare, Rogaway
150
Encrypted key exchange: Password-based protocols secure agai..
- Bellovin, Merritt - 1992
88
Protecting Poorly Chosen Secrets from Guessing Attacks
- Gong, Lomas et al. - 1993
68
Strong Password-Only Authenticated Key Exchange
- Jablon - 1996
44
Refinement and Extension of Encrypted Key Exchange
- Steiner, Tsudik et al.
31
Optimal Authentication Protocols Resistant to Password Guess..
- Gong - 1995
15
Fortifying Key Negotiation Schemes with Poorly Chosen Passwo..
- Anderson, Lomas - 1994
6
private communication (context) - Blake-Wilson
2
Information Leakage in Encrypted Key Exchange (context) - Patel
1
Security Proofs for Entity Authentication and Authenticated .. (context) - Blake-Wilson, Menezes - 1997
1
private communication (context) - Jablon
The graph only includes citing articles where the year of publication is known.
Documents on the same site (http://fermivista.math.jussieu.fr/http/www.dmi.ens.fr.html): More
Threshold Key-Recovery Systems for RSA - Okamoto (1997)
(Correct)
On Signature Schemes With Threshold Verification Detecting.. - Petersen, Michels (1997)
(Correct)
Dependent Type System with Subtyping - Type level Transitivity.. - Chen (1996)
(Correct)
Online articles have much greater impact More about CiteSeer.IST Add search form to your site Submit documents Feedback
CiteSeer.IST - Copyright Penn State and NEC