As the email system is widely used as a communication channel, and often is crucial for the performance of organizations, it is important that users can trust the content of what is being delivered to them. A standard called DomainKeys Identified Mail (DKIM) has been developed by the IETF to solve the problem with authentication and integrity, by using digital signatures. This master's thesis goal is to evaluate the solution where an implementation of DKIM is extended with DNSSEC validation. DNSSEC is a solution which secures, among other, the mapping between IP addresses and domain names. The implementation of DKIM is deployed and evaluated with function testing, domain testing, threat analysis, and interoperability testing.DKIM does not n...
Email as we use it today makes no guarantees about message in-tegrity, authenticity, or confidential...
DNSSEC was designed to protect the Domain Name System (DNS) against DNS cache poisoning and domain h...
Email as we use it today makes no guarantees about message in-tegrity, authenticity, or confidential...
As the email system is widely used as a communication channel, and often is crucial for the performa...
This document provides an overview of the DomainKeys Identified Mail (DKIM) service and describes ho...
The global public-key authentication infrastructure standardized in the Domain Name System Security ...
A major problem for a distributed security system is the management of cryptographic keys. Public ke...
The Simple Mail Transfer Protocol (SMTP) does not have any intrinsic methods of proving the authenti...
DomainKeys Identified Mail (DKIM) is a standardized process that has proven to be a highly effective...
We present Lightweight Email Signatures (LES), a simple cryptographic architecture for authenticatin...
We perform the first Internet study of the cryptographic security of DNSSEC-signed domains. To that ...
Public Key Infrastructure (PKI) has turned out to be useful when two parties negotiate about a share...
The DNS-based Authentication of Named Entities (DANE) standard allows clients and servers to establi...
This document specifies an Internet standards track protocol for the Internet community, and request...
Domain Name System (DNS) plays a massive role in today’s technological era. While initially designed...
Email as we use it today makes no guarantees about message in-tegrity, authenticity, or confidential...
DNSSEC was designed to protect the Domain Name System (DNS) against DNS cache poisoning and domain h...
Email as we use it today makes no guarantees about message in-tegrity, authenticity, or confidential...
As the email system is widely used as a communication channel, and often is crucial for the performa...
This document provides an overview of the DomainKeys Identified Mail (DKIM) service and describes ho...
The global public-key authentication infrastructure standardized in the Domain Name System Security ...
A major problem for a distributed security system is the management of cryptographic keys. Public ke...
The Simple Mail Transfer Protocol (SMTP) does not have any intrinsic methods of proving the authenti...
DomainKeys Identified Mail (DKIM) is a standardized process that has proven to be a highly effective...
We present Lightweight Email Signatures (LES), a simple cryptographic architecture for authenticatin...
We perform the first Internet study of the cryptographic security of DNSSEC-signed domains. To that ...
Public Key Infrastructure (PKI) has turned out to be useful when two parties negotiate about a share...
The DNS-based Authentication of Named Entities (DANE) standard allows clients and servers to establi...
This document specifies an Internet standards track protocol for the Internet community, and request...
Domain Name System (DNS) plays a massive role in today’s technological era. While initially designed...
Email as we use it today makes no guarantees about message in-tegrity, authenticity, or confidential...
DNSSEC was designed to protect the Domain Name System (DNS) against DNS cache poisoning and domain h...
Email as we use it today makes no guarantees about message in-tegrity, authenticity, or confidential...