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One-way functions are necessary and sufficient for secure signatures (1990)

by J Rompel
Venue:in Proc. STOC’90
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Non-Malleable Cryptography

by Danny Dolev, Cynthia Dwork, Moni Naor - SIAM Journal on Computing , 2000
"... The notion of non-malleable cryptography, an extension of semantically secure cryptography, is defined. Informally, in the context of encryption the additional requirement is that given the ciphertext it is impossible to generate a different ciphertext so that the respective plaintexts are related. ..."
Abstract - Cited by 410 (20 self) - Add to MetaCart
The notion of non-malleable cryptography, an extension of semantically secure cryptography, is defined. Informally, in the context of encryption the additional requirement is that given the ciphertext it is impossible to generate a different ciphertext so that the respective plaintexts are related. The same concept makes sense in the contexts of string commitment and zero-knowledge proofs of possession of knowledge. Non-malleable schemes for each of these three problems are presented. The schemes do not assume a trusted center; a user need not know anything about the number or identity of other system users. Our cryptosystem is the first proven to be secure against a strong type of chosen ciphertext attack proposed by Rackoff and Simon, in which the attacker knows the ciphertext she wishes to break and can query the decryption oracle on any ciphertext other than the target.

Public-key Cryptosystems Provably Secure against Chosen Ciphertext Attacks

by Moni Naor, Moti Yung - In Proc. of the 22nd STOC , 1995
"... We show how to construct a public-key cryptosystem (as originally defined by Diffie and Hellman) secure against chosen ciphertext attacks, given a public-key cryptosystem secure against passive eavesdropping and a non-interactive zero-knowledge proof system in the shared string model. No such secure ..."
Abstract - Cited by 212 (13 self) - Add to MetaCart
We show how to construct a public-key cryptosystem (as originally defined by Diffie and Hellman) secure against chosen ciphertext attacks, given a public-key cryptosystem secure against passive eavesdropping and a non-interactive zero-knowledge proof system in the shared string model. No such secure cryptosystems were known before. Key words. cryptography, randomized algorithms AMS subject classifications. 68M10, 68Q20, 68Q22, 68R05, 68R10 A preliminary version of this paper appeared in the Proc. of the Twenty Second ACM Symposium of Theory of Computing. y Incumbent of the Morris and Rose Goldman Career Development Chair, Dept. of Applied Mathematics and Computer Science, Weizmann Institute of Science, Rehovot 76100, Israel. Work performed while at the IBM Almaden Research Center. Research supported by an Alon Fellowship and a grant from the Israel Science Foundation administered by the Israeli Academy of Sciences. E-mail: naor@wisdom.weizmann.ac.il. z IBM Research Division, T.J ...

The Random Oracle Methodology, Revisited

by Ran Canetti, Oded Goldreich, Shai Halevi , 1998
"... ..."
Abstract - Cited by 206 (5 self) - Add to MetaCart
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How to Time-stamp a Digital Document

by Stuart Haber, W. Scott Stornetta - Journal of Cryptology , 1991
"... The prospect of a world in which all text, audio, picture, and video documents are in digital form on easily modifiable media raises the issue of how to certify when a document was created or last changed. The problem is to time-stamp the data, not the medium. We propose computationally practical ..."
Abstract - Cited by 185 (2 self) - Add to MetaCart
The prospect of a world in which all text, audio, picture, and video documents are in digital form on easily modifiable media raises the issue of how to certify when a document was created or last changed. The problem is to time-stamp the data, not the medium. We propose computationally practical procedures for digital time-stamping of such documents so that it is infeasible for a user either to back-date or to forward-date his document, even with the collusion of a time-stamping service. Our procedures maintain complete privacy of the documents themselves, and require no record-keeping by the time-stamping service. Appeared, with minor editorial changes, in Journal of Cryptology, Vol. 3, No. 2, pp. 99--111, 1991. 0 Time's glory is to calm contending kings, To unmask falsehood, and bring truth to light, To stamp the seal of time in aged things, To wake the morn, and sentinel the night, To wrong the wronger till he render right. The Rape of Lucrece, l. 941 1 Introduction ...

Design and Analysis of Practical Public-Key Encryption Schemes Secure against Adaptive Chosen Ciphertext Attack

by Ronald Cramer, Victor Shoup - SIAM Journal on Computing , 2001
"... A new public key encryption scheme, along with several variants, is proposed and analyzed. The scheme and its variants are quite practical, and are proved secure against adaptive chosen ciphertext attack under standard intractability assumptions. These appear to be the first public-key encryption sc ..."
Abstract - Cited by 149 (10 self) - Add to MetaCart
A new public key encryption scheme, along with several variants, is proposed and analyzed. The scheme and its variants are quite practical, and are proved secure against adaptive chosen ciphertext attack under standard intractability assumptions. These appear to be the first public-key encryption schemes in the literature that are simultaneously practical and provably secure.

Signature schemes and anonymous credentials from bilinear maps

by Anna Lysyanskaya , 2004
"... Abstract. We propose a new and efficient signature scheme that is provably secure in the plain model. The security of our scheme is based on a discrete-logarithm-based assumption put forth by Lysyanskaya, Rivest, Sahai, and Wolf (LRSW) who also showed that it holds for generic groups and is independ ..."
Abstract - Cited by 143 (18 self) - Add to MetaCart
Abstract. We propose a new and efficient signature scheme that is provably secure in the plain model. The security of our scheme is based on a discrete-logarithm-based assumption put forth by Lysyanskaya, Rivest, Sahai, and Wolf (LRSW) who also showed that it holds for generic groups and is independent of the decisional Diffie-Hellman assumption. We prove security of our scheme under the LRSW assumption for groups with bilinear maps. We then show how our scheme can be used to construct efficient anonymous credential systems as well as group signature and identity escrow schemes. To this end, we provide efficient protocols that allow one to prove in zero-knowledge the knowledge of a signature on a committed (or encrypted) message and to obtain a signature on a committed message. 1

Limits on the Provable Consequences of One-way Permutations

by Russell Impagliazzo, Steven Rudich , 1989
"... We present strong evidence that the implication, "if one-way permutations exist, then secure secret key agreement is possible" is not provable by standard techniques. Since both sides of this implication are widely believed true in real life, to show that the implication is false requires a new m ..."
Abstract - Cited by 138 (0 self) - Add to MetaCart
We present strong evidence that the implication, "if one-way permutations exist, then secure secret key agreement is possible" is not provable by standard techniques. Since both sides of this implication are widely believed true in real life, to show that the implication is false requires a new model. We consider a world where dl parties have access to a black box or a randomly selected permutation. Being totally random, this permutation will be strongly oneway in provable, information-thevretic way. We show that, if P = NP, no protocol for secret key agreement is secure in such setting. Thus, to prove that a secret key greement protocol which uses a one-way permutation as a black box is secure is as hrd as proving F NP. We also obtain, as corollary, that there is an oracle relative to which the implication is false, i.e., there is a one-way permutation, yet secret-exchange is impossible. Thus, no technique which relativizes can prove that secret exchange can be based on any one-way permutation. Our results present a general framework for proving statements of the form, "Cryptographic application X is not likely possible based solely on complexity assumption Y." 1

How to Sign Digital Streams

by Rosario Gennaro, Pankaj Rohatgi , 1997
"... We present a new efficient paradigm for signing digital streams. The problem of signing digital streams to prove their authenticity is substantially different from the problem of signing regular messages. Traditional signature schemes are message oriented and require the receiver to process the enti ..."
Abstract - Cited by 116 (0 self) - Add to MetaCart
We present a new efficient paradigm for signing digital streams. The problem of signing digital streams to prove their authenticity is substantially different from the problem of signing regular messages. Traditional signature schemes are message oriented and require the receiver to process the entire message before being able to authenticate its signature. However, a stream is a potentially very long ( or infinite) sequence of bits that the sender sends to the receiver and the receiver is required to consumes the received bits at more or less the input rate and without excessive delay. Therefore it is infeasible for the receiver to obtain the entire stream before authenticating and consuming it. Examples of streams include digitized video and audio files, data feeds and applets. We present two solutions to the problem of authenticating digital streams. The first one is for the case of a finite stream which is entirely known to the sender (say a movie). We use this constraint to devise...

Foundations of Group Signatures: Formal Definitions, Simplified Requirements, and a Construction Based on General Assumptions

by Mihir Bellare, Daniele Micciancio, Bogdan Warinschi , 2003
"... This paper provides theoretical foundations for the group signature primitive. We introduce strong, formal definitions for the core requirements of anonymity and traceability. We then show that these imply the large set of sometimes ambiguous existing informal requirements in the literature, thereb ..."
Abstract - Cited by 110 (3 self) - Add to MetaCart
This paper provides theoretical foundations for the group signature primitive. We introduce strong, formal definitions for the core requirements of anonymity and traceability. We then show that these imply the large set of sometimes ambiguous existing informal requirements in the literature, thereby unifying and simplifying the requirements for this primitive. Finally we prove the existence of a construct meeting our definitions based only on the assumption that trapdoor permutations exist.

Public-Key Cryptosystems from Lattice Reduction Problems

by Oded Goldreich, Shafi Goldwasser, Shai Halevi , 1996
"... We present a new proposal for a trapdoor one-way function, from whichwe derive public-key encryption and digital signatures. The security of the new construction is based on the conjectured computational difficulty of lattice-reduction problems, providing a possible alternative to existing public-ke ..."
Abstract - Cited by 99 (4 self) - Add to MetaCart
We present a new proposal for a trapdoor one-way function, from whichwe derive public-key encryption and digital signatures. The security of the new construction is based on the conjectured computational difficulty of lattice-reduction problems, providing a possible alternative to existing public-key encryption algorithms and digital signatures such as RSA and DSS.
The National Science Foundation
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