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Abstract:
The Key-exchange protocol is one of the most basic and widely used cryptographic protocols in internet for secure communication. In a two-party setting, cryptographic protocol design has often ignored the possibility of simultaneous message transmission by each of the two parties. Most protocols for two-party have been designed assuming that parties alternate sending their messages. We present two provably-secure protocols for two-party authenticated key exchange (AKE) which require not only a single round, but more efficient message transmission (from a computational perspective). The protocol provides Implicit Authentication, key independence and forward secrecy, and is analyzed in the standard model. The protocols are the first provably-secure one-round protocol for authenticated 2-party key exchange in the standard model that the message lengths are equal to the basic protocol. © 2009 Springer Berlin Heidelberg.
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ISSN: 0302-9743
Year: 2009
Volume: 5574 LNCS
Page: 226-233
Language: English
Cited Count:
SCOPUS Cited Count: 2
ESI Highly Cited Papers on the List: 0 Unfold All
WanFang Cited Count:
Chinese Cited Count:
30 Days PV: 7
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