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JUCS
2008

Bilateral Unknown Key-Share Attacks in Key Agreement Protocols

13 years 4 months ago
Bilateral Unknown Key-Share Attacks in Key Agreement Protocols
Unknown Key-Share (UKS) resilience is a basic security attribute in authenticated key agreement protocols, whereby two entities A and B should not be able to be coerced into sharing a key between them when in fact either A or B thinks that s/he is sharing the key with another entity C. In this paper we revisit some definitions of this attribute, the existing UKS attacks and the method of proving this attribute in the Bellare-Rogaway (BR) model in the literature. We propose a new UKS attack, which coerces two entities A and B into sharing a key with each other but in fact A thinks that she is sharing the key with another entity C and B thinks that he is sharing the key with another entity D, where C and D might or might not be the same entity. We call this attack a Bilateral Unknown Key-Share (BUKS) attack and refer to the existing UKS attacks, which are against one entity only, as a Unilateral UKS (UUKS) attack. We demonstrate that a few well-known authenticated key agreement protocol...
Liqun Chen, Qiang Tang
Added 13 Dec 2010
Updated 13 Dec 2010
Type Journal
Year 2008
Where JUCS
Authors Liqun Chen, Qiang Tang
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