posted on 2009-12-17, 10:15authored byRaphael C.-W. Phan
When humans interact with machines in their daily networks, it is important that security of the communications is offered, and where the involved shared secrets used to achieve this are easily remembered by humans. Password-based authenticated group key exchange (PAGKE) schemes allow group users to share a session key based on a human-memorizable password. In this paper, we consider two PAGKE schemes that build on the seminal scheme of Burmester and Desmedt. Weshow an undetectable online dictionary attack on the first scheme, and exploit the partnering definition to break the key indistinguishability of the second scheme.
History
School
Mechanical, Electrical and Manufacturing Engineering
Citation
PHAN, R.C.-W., 2009. Security of two recent constant-round password authenticated group key exchange schemes. IN: International Conference on Advanced Information Networking and Applications Workshops, (WAINA '09), Bradford, 26-29 May, pp. 134-139