The internet has grown greatly in the past decade, by some numbers exceeding 47 million active web sites and a total aggregate exceeding 100 million web sites. What is common practice today on the Internet is that servers have public keys, but clients are largely authenticated via short passwords. Protecting these passwords by not storing them in the clear on institutions's servers has become a priority. This paper develops password-based ciphersuites for the Transport Layer Security (TLS) protocol that are: (1) resistant to server compromise; (2) provably secure; (3) believed to be free from patent and licensing restrictions based on an analysis of relevant patents in the area
TLS is by far the most important protocol on the Internet for negotiating secure session keys and pr...
Real-world cryptographic protocols such as the widely used Transport Layer Security (TLS) protocol s...
Passwords have become the most ubiquitous form of client-server authentication on the Internet nowad...
The internet has grown greatly in the past decade, by some numbers exceeding 47 million active web s...
International audienceThe Internet has evolved into a very hostile ecosystem where "phishing" attack...
In this paper, we show how to design an efficient, provably secure password-based authenticated key...
SSL is the de facto standard today for securing endto -end transport. While the protocol seems rathe...
International audienceThe TLS Internet Standard, previously known as SSL, is the default protocol fo...
In the business world, data is generally the most important asset of a company that must be protecte...
Abstract—TLS is possibly the most used protocol for secure communications, with a 18-year history of...
SSL is the de facto standard today for securing end-to-end transport on the Internet. While the prot...
Often during security checks we discover that the configuration of these systems does not meet the r...
Internet browsers use security protocols to protect sensitive messages. An inductive analysis of TLS...
Secure protocols for password-based user authentication are well-studied in the cryptographic litera...
Abstract—TLS was designed as a transparent channel abstrac-tion to allow developers with no cryptogr...
TLS is by far the most important protocol on the Internet for negotiating secure session keys and pr...
Real-world cryptographic protocols such as the widely used Transport Layer Security (TLS) protocol s...
Passwords have become the most ubiquitous form of client-server authentication on the Internet nowad...
The internet has grown greatly in the past decade, by some numbers exceeding 47 million active web s...
International audienceThe Internet has evolved into a very hostile ecosystem where "phishing" attack...
In this paper, we show how to design an efficient, provably secure password-based authenticated key...
SSL is the de facto standard today for securing endto -end transport. While the protocol seems rathe...
International audienceThe TLS Internet Standard, previously known as SSL, is the default protocol fo...
In the business world, data is generally the most important asset of a company that must be protecte...
Abstract—TLS is possibly the most used protocol for secure communications, with a 18-year history of...
SSL is the de facto standard today for securing end-to-end transport on the Internet. While the prot...
Often during security checks we discover that the configuration of these systems does not meet the r...
Internet browsers use security protocols to protect sensitive messages. An inductive analysis of TLS...
Secure protocols for password-based user authentication are well-studied in the cryptographic litera...
Abstract—TLS was designed as a transparent channel abstrac-tion to allow developers with no cryptogr...
TLS is by far the most important protocol on the Internet for negotiating secure session keys and pr...
Real-world cryptographic protocols such as the widely used Transport Layer Security (TLS) protocol s...
Passwords have become the most ubiquitous form of client-server authentication on the Internet nowad...