Gerard Ryan
New Jersey Institute of Technology
8 Papers
3 Citations
Gerard Ryan is an academic researcher from New Jersey Institute of Technology. The author has contributed to research in topics: Encryption & Digital signature. The author has an hindex of 5, co-authored 8 publications. Previous affiliations of Gerard Ryan include Alcatel-Lucent.
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Papers
PICADOR: End-to-end encrypted Publish–Subscribe information distribution with proxy re-encryption
TL;DR: PICADOR is designed for topic-based Pub/Sub systems and provides end-to-end payload confidentiality and a novel PRE scheme that leverages a general lattice encryption software library is designed and implemented.
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Practical Applications of Improved Gaussian Sampling for Trapdoor Lattices
TL;DR: In this paper, the Gentry-Peikert-Vaikuntanathan (GPV) digital signature, IBE, and CP-ABE schemes were implemented using an efficient Gaussian sampling algorithm for trapdoor lattices.
36
Securely Sharing Encrypted Medical Information
Arnab Deb Gupta,Yuriy Polyakov,Kurt Rohloff,Gerard Ryan +3 more
- 27 Jun 2016
TL;DR: The architecture uses recent Proxy Re-Encryption advances in a publish-subscribe design pattern that can be used to securely share medical data to lower medical data storage costs by using commodity cloud hosting while reducing vulnerability to attacks that compromise confidentiality of sensitive medical records.
2
Access network evolution and residential gateways
Rae McLellan,Alan David Berenbaum,Joann J. Ordille,Gerard Ryan +3 more
- 01 Feb 1998
TL;DR: An architecture for an interconnection network, including a low cost modular Residential Gateway, is presented and provides a framework for supporting self- configuring 'plug and play' network elements that provide dynamic access to multiple services.
1
Implementation and Evaluation of Improved Gaussian Sampling for Lattice Trapdoors
TL;DR: In this paper, a new Gaussian sampling algorithm for lattice trapdoors with prime moduli is proposed, which can be used for a wide range of cryptographic primitives including digital signatures, attributed-based encryption, program obfuscation and others.