—We consider the question of how a conspiring subgroup of peers in a p2p network can find each other and communicate without provoking suspicion among regular peers or an author...
Raphael Eidenbenz, Thomas Locher, Roger Wattenhofe...
The need for communication privacy over public networks is of growing concern in today’s society. As a result, privacy-preserving authentication and key exchange protocols have ...
Giuseppe Ateniese, Jonathan Kirsch, Marina Blanton
In a society increasingly concerned with the steady assault on electronic privacy, the need for privacy-preserving techniques is both natural and justified. This need extends to t...
Secret handshakes were recently introduced [BDS+ 03] to allow members of the same group to authenticate each other secretly, in the sense that someone who is not a group member ca...
Claude Castelluccia, Stanislaw Jarecki, Gene Tsudi...
Consider a CIA agent who wants to authenticate herself to a server, but does not want to reveal her CIA credentials unless the server is a genuine CIA outlet. Consider also that t...