18 Papers
45 Citations
Ge Wu is an academic researcher from Information Technology University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Cryptography & Cloud computing. The author has an hindex of 4, co-authored 14 publications. Previous affiliations of Ge Wu include University of Wollongong & Southeast University.
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Papers
Notes on the security of certificateless aggregate signature schemes
Futai Zhang,Limin Shen,Ge Wu +2 more
TL;DR: Security analysis to an efficient certificateless aggregate signature scheme is given by showing four kinds of concrete attacks and indicates coalition attacks, especially those from the collusion of an inside signer with a malicious KGC are practical and destructive, and hence should be prevented in the design of CLAS schemes.
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Certificateless aggregate signature scheme secure against fully chosen-key attacks
TL;DR: It is found there is no CLAS scheme secure in traditional security models that is secure against fully chosen-key attacks and how to reinforce the security of an existing scheme to withstand such an attack is demonstrated.
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Privacy-Preserving Cloud Auditing with Multiple Uploaders
Ge Wu,Yi Mu,Willy Susilo,Fuchun Guo +3 more
- 16 Nov 2016
TL;DR: This paper proposes an anonymous cloud auditing scheme with multiple uploaders (ACAMU), which achieves unconditional anonymity for the uploaders, namely, the TPA cannot distinguish the identity of the uploader even though it holds all the uploadeders’ secret keys after performing the auditing operation.
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Software Defined Intelligent Building
TL;DR: The authors apply the technology of software defined networking to satisfy the requirement for efficiency in intelligent building networks and designed the lightweight security mechanism with two foundation protocols and a full protocol that uses the foundation protocols as example.
An Anonymous Authentication System for Pay-As-You-Go Cloud Computing
TL;DR: Cloud computing offers on-demand availability of computing resources over the Internet, providing access controllability, user anonymity and public traceability through pricing schemes, which allows authenticated users to anonymously access services from a provider.
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