Open Access
A Method for Obtaining Digital Signatures and Public Key Cryptosystems (Formerly on Digital Signatures and Public Key Cryptosystems)
Ronald L. Rivest,Adi Shamir,Len Adelman +2 more
- 01 Jan 1977
8.2K
TL;DR: In this paper, a message is encrypted by representing it as a number M, raising M to a publicly specified power e, and then taking the remainder when the result is divided by the publicly specified product, n, of two large secret prime numbers p and q.
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Abstract: An encryption method is presented with the novel property that publicly revealing an encryption key does not thereby reveal the corresponding decryption key. This has two important consequences:Couriers or other secure means are not needed to transmit keys, since a message can be enciphered using an encryption key publicly revealed by the intended recipient. Only he can decipher the message, since only he knows the corresponding decryption key.
A message can be “signed” using a privately held decryption key. Anyone can verify this signature using the corresponding publicly revealed encryption key. Signatures cannot be forged, and a signer cannot later deny the validity of his signature. This has obvious applications in “electronic mail” and “electronic funds transfer” systems. A message is encrypted by representing it as a number M, raising M to a publicly specified power e, and then taking the remainder when the result is divided by the publicly specified product, n, of two large secret prime numbers p and q. Decryption is similar; only a different, secret, power d is used, where e * d = 1(mod (p - 1) * (q - 1)). The security of the system rests in part on the difficulty of factoring the published divisor, n.
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Citations
Generalization of proxy signature based on elliptic curves
TL;DR: The authors shall present a generalized version of proxy signature scheme that can be applied to every possible proxy situation and demonstrate how to specify proxy signature schemes on elliptic curve over finite fields.
57
Exploiting Collisions in Addition Chain-Based Exponentiation Algorithms Using a Single Trace
Neil Hanley,HeeSeok Kim,HeeSeok Kim,Michael Tunstall +3 more
- 20 Apr 2015
TL;DR: This paper extends a collision attack applied to an instance of an exponentiation to an adversary who seeks to determine whether the output of one operation is used as the input to another, and demonstrates that a side-channel resistant implementation of a group exponentiation algorithm will require countermeasures that introduce enough noise such that an attack is not practical.
On Key Distribution Systems
Yacov Yacobi,Zahava Shmuely +1 more
- 01 Jul 1989
TL;DR: This work proposes relaxed criteria for the security of KDS, and presents a system which meets most of the criteria, and gives evidence that one of the variants has super-polynomial security against any malicious adversary, assuming RSA modulus is hard to factor.
Permutation trinomials over F2m
TL;DR: All permutation trinomials over F 2 m in Zieve's paper are determined and a conjecture proposed by Gupta and Sharma in [8] is proved and it is shown that some classes of permutations trInomials with parameters are QM equivalent to some known permutation Trinomial.
57
A novel color image encryption scheme based on a new dynamic compound chaotic map and S-box
Tahir Sajjad Ali,Rashid Ali +1 more
TL;DR: In this article , a chaotic map (piecewise linear chaotic map) is used for the generation of S-box and pixel values modification to generate element of nonlinearity and then these modified values are further diffused with another random sequence, generated by tent logistic chaotic map.
References
New Directions in Cryptography
TL;DR: This paper suggests ways to solve currently open problems in cryptography, and discusses how the theories of communication and computation are beginning to provide the tools to solve cryptographic problems of long standing.
•Book
The Art of Computer Programming, Volume 2: Seminumerical Algorithms
Donald E. Knuth
- 01 Jan 1981
4.4K
Secure communications over insecure channels
TL;DR: This paper shows that it is possible to select a key over open communications channels in such a fashion that communications security can be maintained, and describes a method which forces any enemy to expend an amount of work which increases as the square of the work required of the two communicants to select the key.
A Fast Monte-Carlo Test for Primality
Robert Solovay,Volker Strassen +1 more
TL;DR: A uniform distribution a from a uniform distribution on the set 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 is a random number and if a and n are relatively prime, compute the residue varepsilon.
672
Theorems on factorization and primality testing
J. M. Pollard
- 01 Nov 1974
TL;DR: This paper is concerned with the problem of obtaining theoretical estimates for the number of arithmetical operations required to factorize a large integer n or test it for primality, and uses a multi-tape Turing machine for this purpose.
449
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