A novel and efficient unlinkable secret handshakes scheme Author: Hai Huang and Zhenfu Cao Source: IEEE Comm. Letters 13 (5) (2009) Presenter: Yu-Chi Chen
Outline Introduction Huang and Cao’s scheme Conclusions
Introduction A secret handshakes – affiliation-hiding authentication – firstly introduced by Balfanz et al. – For example, two FBI agents, Alice and Bob, want to discover and communicates with other agents, but they don’t want to reveal their affiliations to non-agents.
Introduction An unlinkable secret handshakes – provide unlinkability – an adversary cannot link any two different instances of same party. Given C, to guess C is AB, A’B’, or other. unlinkability has been widely considered in many applications.
Introduction Jarecki et al.’s scheme – an unlinkable secret handshakes – not efficient Huang and Cao presented an unlinkable secret handshake scheme – novel and efficient – Simple, so it can be published in IEEE-CL.
Outline Introduction Huang and Cao’s scheme Conclusions
Huang and Cao’s scheme This figure is copied from IEEE Comm. Letters 13 (9) (2009), page 731
Conclusions Huang and Cao analyzed this scheme can provide authenticated key exchange security, affiliation-hiding, and unlinkability. The scheme is more efficient than Jarecki et al.’s.
On the security of a novel and efficient unlinkable secret handshakes scheme Author: Renwang Su Source: IEEE Comm. Letters 13 (9) (2009)
Su found Huang and Cao’s scheme is not secure. – Cannot provide authenticated key exchange security.
This figure is copied from IEEE Comm. Letters 13 (9) (2009), page 731
Security analysis of an unlinkable secret handshakes scheme Author: T.-Y. Youn and Y.-H. Park Source: IEEE Comm. Letters 14 (1) (2009)
Youn and Park also found Huang and Cao’s scheme is not secure. – Cannot provide authenticated key exchange security and affiliation-hiding.
Receiving v B, then try find PK where v B =H 1 (K A, (PK, E A, E B ), resp)