About: Electronic authentication is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 321 publications have been published within this topic receiving 3616 citations.
TL;DR: The possibility of a "transparent human," whose vital information is up for grabs, can most easily be envisioned in the realm of e-commerce, due in part to the large amounts of data available, and the high payoffs expected from using this data for marketing purposes.
Abstract: In times of ubiquitous electronic communication and increasing industry pressure for standard electronic authentication, the maintenance of privacy, or "the right to be left alone" becomes a subject of increasing concern. The possibility of a "transparent human," whose vital information is up for grabs, can most easily be envisioned in the realm of e-commerce, due in part to the large amounts of data available, and in part to the high payoffs expected from using this data for marketing purposes.
TL;DR: This document defines technical requirements for each of the three authenticator assurance levels and supersedes corresponding sections of NIST Special Publication (SP) 800-63-2.
Abstract: These guidelines provide technical requirements for federal agencies implementing digital identity services and are not intended to constrain the development or use of standards outside of this purpose. These guidelines focus on the authentication of subjects interacting with government systems over open networks, establishing that a given claimant is a subscriber who has been previously authenticated. The result of the authentication process may be used locally by the system performing the authentication or may be asserted elsewhere in a federated identity system. This document defines technical requirements for each of the three authenticator assurance levels. This publication supersedes corresponding sections of NIST Special Publication (SP) 800-63-2.
TL;DR: In this article, the authors proposed a new dynamic accumulator scheme based on bilinear maps and showed how to apply it to the problem of revocation of anonymous credentials, proving a credential's validity and updating witnesses both come at (virtually) no cost for credential owners and verifiers.
Abstract: The success of electronic authentication systems, be it e-ID card systems or Internet authentication systems such as CardSpace, highly depends on the provided level of user-privacy. Thereby, an important requirement is an efficient means for revocation of the authentication credentials. In this paper we consider the problem of revocation for certificate-based privacy-protecting authentication systems. To date, the most efficient solutions for revocation for such systems are based on cryptographic accumulators. Here, an accumulate of all currently valid certificates is published regularly and each user holds a witness enabling her to prove the validity of her (anonymous) credential while retaining anonymity. Unfortunately, the users' witnesses must be updated at least each time a credential is revoked. For the know solutions, these updates are computationally very expensive for users and/or certificate issuers which is very problematic as revocation is a frequent event as practice shows.
In this paper, we propose a new dynamic accumulator scheme based on bilinear maps and show how to apply it to the problem of revocation of anonymous credentials. In the resulting scheme, proving a credential's validity and updating witnesses both come at (virtually) no cost for credential owners and verifiers. In particular, updating a witness requires the issuer to do only one multiplication per addition or revocation of a credential and can also be delegated to untrusted entities from which a user could just retrieve the updated witness. We believe that thereby we provide the first authentication system offering privacy protection suitable for implementation with electronic tokens such as eID cards or drivers' licenses.
TL;DR: In this article, a technique for combining biometric identification with digital certificates for electronic authentication called biometric certificates is proposed, which includes the management of biometrics certificates through the use of a biometric certificate management system.
Abstract: A technique for combining biometric identification with digital certificates for electronic authentication called biometric certificates. The technique includes the management of biometric certificates through the use of a biometric certificate management system. Biometric certificates may be used in any electronic transaction requiring authentication of the participants. Biometric data is pre-stored in a biometric database of the biometric certificate management system by receiving data corresponding to physical characteristics of registered users through a biometric input device. Subsequent transactions to be conducted over a network have biometric certificates generated from the physical characteristics of a current user, which is then appended to the transaction, and which then authenticates the user by comparison against the pre-stored biometric data of the physical characteristics of users in the biometric database.
TL;DR: The National Institute of Standards and Technology Special Publication 800-63-1, Electronic Authentication Guidelines recommendation provides technical guidelines for Federal agencies implementing electronic authentication and is not intended to constrict the development or use of standards outside of this purpose.
Abstract: The National Institute of Standards and Technology Special Publication 800-63-1, Electronic Authentication Guidelines recommendation provides technical guidelines for Federal agencies implementing electronic authentication and is not intended to constrict the development or use of standards outside of this purpose. This publication supersedes NIST SP 800-63. The recommendation covers remote authentication of users (such as employees, contractors, or private individuals) interacting with government IT systems over open networks. It defines technical requirements for each of four levels of assurance in the areas of identity proofing, registration, tokens, management processes, authentication protocols and related assertions. ~