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CRYPTO
2005
Springer

Authenticating Pervasive Devices with Human Protocols

13 years 10 months ago
Authenticating Pervasive Devices with Human Protocols
Forgery and counterfeiting are emerging as serious security risks in low-cost pervasive computing devices. These devices lack the computational, storage, power, and communication resources necessary for most cryptographic authentication schemes. Surprisingly, low-cost pervasive devices like Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) tags share similar capabilities with another weak computing device: people. These similarities motivate the adoption of techniques from humancomputer security to the pervasive computing setting. This paper analyzes a particular human-to-computer authentication protocol designed by Hopper and Blum (HB), and shows it to be practical for low-cost pervasive devices. We offer an improved, concrete proof of security for the HB protocol against passive adversaries. This paper also offers a new, augmented version of the HB protocol, named HB+ , that is secure against active adversaries. The HB+ protocol is a novel, symmetric authentication protocol with a simple, low...
Ari Juels, Stephen A. Weis
Added 26 Jun 2010
Updated 26 Jun 2010
Type Conference
Year 2005
Where CRYPTO
Authors Ari Juels, Stephen A. Weis
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